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Propionic acidemia:: mutation update and functional and structural effects of the variant alleles

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND METABOLISM
Volume 83, Issue 1-2, Pages 28-37

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2004.08.001

Keywords

propionic acidema; mutations; PCCA; PCCB; propionyl-CoA carboxylase; expression analysis; structural models; genotype-phenotype

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Mutations in the PCCA or PCCB genes, encoding both subunits of propiony-CoA carboxylase, result in propionic acidemia, a life-threatening inborn error of metabolism with autosomal recessive inheritance. To date, 41 mutations in the PCCA gene and 54 in the PCCB gene have been reported, most of them single base substitutions causing amino acid replacements, and a variety of small insertions and deletions and splicing defects. A greater heterogeneity is observed in the PCCA gene, specially in Caucasians, with no prevalent mutations, while in the Japanese population three mutations account for more than half of the alleles studied. For the PCCB gene a limited number of mutations is responsible for the majority of the alleles characterized in both Caucasian and Oriental populations. These two populations show a different mutational spectrum, only sharing some involving CpG dinucleotides probably as recurrent mutational events. Functional characterization of the mutant missense alleles has been accomplished using different prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, and the structural consequences have been analyzed in the available crystal models. For the PCCA gene, the main molecular effect of the expressed mutations is related to protein instability, except two mutations in the active site predictably affecting ATP binding. In the PCCB gene the majority of the analyzed mutations are predicted to alter the active site conformation resulting in diminished activity. A few carboxy-terminal PCCB mutations affect the interaction between subunits and the assembly with PCCA to form a functional PCC oligomer. The amount of normal transcripts resulting from some PCCA and PCCB splicing mutations has also been analyzed. Overall, the data generated from the expression analysis reveal potential genotype-phenotype correlations for this clinically heterogeneous disorder. (C) 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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