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MUTATIONS IN THE PPOX GENE IN SOUTH AFRICAN
FAMILIES
| Exon |
Mutation
|
Clinical expression
|
|
2
|
H20P
|
Typical
VP. |
|
2
|
L15F |
Typical
VP. Mutation identified in UK patients
with VP and probably imported to South
Africa by a British settler. |
|
3
|
R59W
|
Typical
VP. The South African founder mutation
imported to the Cape in 1688 and now
widespread in the population. Also
identified in the Netherlands, where
it is rare, and shown by haplotype
analysis to be genetically related
to the South African population. Also
the mutation found on one allele of
all four South African patients with
compound heterozygous ("homozygous")
VP. |
|
5
|
R138P
|
Less
severe mutation which does not cause
typical VP in heterozygotes, but found
in trans to the R59W mutation
in two mixed-race sisters with compound
heterozygous VP. These sisters are
relatively less-severely affected,
in keeping with a mild mutation. |
|
6
|
537
delAT |
Typical
VP in a mixed-race family. |
|
6
|
R168C |
Less
severe mutation which does not cause
typical VP in heterozygotes, but was
found in trans to the R59W
mutation in a patient with severe
compound heterozygous VP. |
|
7
|
C769delG;
770T>A |
Typical
VP in a mixed-race family. |
|
8
|
V290M
|
Typical
VP in an indigenous African family. |
|
10
|
Y348C
|
Less
severe mutation which does not cause
typical VP in heterozygotes, but was
found in trans to the R59W
mutation in a patient with severe
compound heterozygous VP. |
|
11
|
Q375X |
Typical
VP in a Canadian family settled in
South Africa. |
These are the mutations
in the protoporphyrinogen oxidase (PPOX)
gene which we have identified in South
African families with variegate porphyria.
Three are mutations which produce a PPOX
protein with considerable residual enzymatic
activity, and for this reason are not
associated with disease in heterozygotes.
However, when found in trans* to
the R59W mutation, which produces a non-functional
PPOX protein, the patient's enzyme activity
is drastically reducedin the order
of about 5% of normal, compared with the
50% of a typical VP heterozygoteresulting
in a severe phenotype which we know as
homozygous
VP. (The patients are more correctly
termed compound heterozygotes.)
* in trans: the
technical term meaning that the mutation
is found on the other of the two alleles
for PPOX, not on the same allele as the
R59W mutation.
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