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      Genotype spectrum of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency: Correlation with the clinical and biochemical phenotype

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          Abstract

          Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, a partially dominant X-linked disorder, is the most common inherited defect of the urea cycle. Previous reports suggested a variable phenotypic spectrum, and several studies documented different "private" mutations in the OTC genes of patients. Our laboratory identified disease-causing mutations in 157 families with OTC deficiency, 100 of which came to medical attention through a hemizygous propositus and in 57 the index case was a heterozygous female. We correlated the genotype with age of onset, liver OTC activity, incorporation of nitrogen into urea, and peak plasma ammonia levels. The "neonatal onset" group has a homogeneous clinical and biochemical phenotype, whereas the "late onset" group shows an extremely wide phenotype; 60% of the mutations are associated exclusively with acute neonatal hyperammonemic coma. The remaining mutations caused a nonuniform phenotype ranging from severe disease to no symptoms; 31% of the mutations in the OTC gene occur in CpG dinucleotides (methylation-mediated deamination), and none of them accounted for more than 4% of the total. Eighty-six percent of the mutations represented single-base substitutions and 68% of the substitutions were transitions. G-to-A and C-to-T transitions were the most frequent substitutions (34 and 21%, respectively) whereas C-to-A, A-to-C, C-to-G, and T-to-A transversions were the least common (1.5-3%). Twenty percent of propositi and 77% of propositae carried new mutations. Forty percent of female germinal mutations were in CpG dinucleotides whereas this number appears much smaller in male germinal mutations. These data allow classification of patients with OTC deficiency into at least two groups who have discordant disease course and prognoses. In addition, they improve our understanding on the origin of mutations in the OTC gene and allow better counseling of affected families.

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          Asymptomatic and late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency caused by a A208T mutation: clinical, biochemical and DNA analyses in a four-generation family.

          We describe a 4-generation family in which a previously healthy 10-year-old boy died of late-onset ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency. Pedigree analysis and allopurinol loading tests in female relatives were not informative. A missense mutation (A208T) in the OTC gene was detected in the deceased patient and in several clinically healthy male and female relatives, the oldest male being 97 years old. OTC deficiency was established in autopsy liver tissue of the propositus and liver biopsy samples of his sister, mother, and a maternal uncle. The males had 4% and 6% residual activity, respectively, the females 58% and 67%, respectively. The observed relation between the mutation and the decreased OTC activity in liver tissue of these subjects suggests that the mutation is a deleterious one. Late-onset, "mild" OTC deficiency can have a fatal or a favorable outcome. The disease can segregate undetected in families.
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            Molecular Recognition by Ornithine and Aspartate Transcarbamylases

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              American Journal of Medical Genetics
              Am. J. Med. Genet.
              Wiley
              0148-7299
              1096-8628
              August 14 2000
              August 14 2000
              2000
              : 93
              : 4
              : 313-319
              Article
              10.1002/1096-8628(20000814)93:4<313::AID-AJMG11>3.0.CO;2-M
              10946359
              4d0d738b-e126-45fa-aff7-11b77ea36f47
              © 2000

              http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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