4.4 Article

A high frequency and geographical distribution of MMACHC R132*mutation in children with cobalamin C defect

Journal

AMINO ACIDS
Volume 53, Issue 2, Pages 253-264

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00726-021-02942-8

Keywords

Cobalamin; MMACHC; c.394C > T; R132*; Methylmalonic aciduria; Homocystinuria; Inborn error of metabolism

Funding

  1. Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi, Government of India [09/141(0191)/2013-EMR-I]

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Cobalamin C defect is caused by pathogenic variants in the MMACHC gene, resulting in the accumulation of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine. Neurological manifestations are the most common symptoms in affected individuals, indicating a potential target for read-through therapeutics.
Cobalamin C defect is caused by pathogenic variants in the MMACHC gene leading to impaired conversion of dietary vitamin B-12 into methylcobalamin and adenosylcobalamin. Variants in the MMACHC gene cause accumulation of methylmalonic acid and homocysteine along with decreased methionine synthesis. The spectrum of MMACHC gene variants differs in various populations. A total of 19 North Indian children (age 0-18 years) with elevated methylmalonic acid and homocysteine were included in the study, and their DNA samples were subjected to Sanger sequencing of coding exons with flanking intronic regions of MMACHC gene. The genetic analysis resulted in the identification of a common pathogenic nonsense mutation, c.394C > T (R132*) in 85.7% of the unrelated cases with suspected cobalamin C defect. Two other known mutations c.347T > C (7%) and c.316G > A were also detected. Plasma homocysteine was significantly elevated (> 100 mu mol/L) in 75% of the cases and methionine was decreased in 81% of the cases. Propionyl (C3)-carnitine, the primary marker for cobalamin C defect, was found to be elevated in only 43.75% of cases. However, the secondary markers such as C3/C2 and C3/C16 ratios were elevated in 87.5% and 100% of the cases, respectively. Neurological manifestations were the most common in our cohort. Our findings of the high frequency of a single MMACHC R132* mutation in cases with combined homocystinuria and methylmalonic aciduria may be proven helpful in designing a cost-effective and time-saving diagnostic strategy for resource-constraint settings. Since the R132* mutation is located near the last exon-exon junction, this is a potential target for the read-through therapeutics.

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