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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 

Hemophilia B Leyden: substitution of thymine for guanine at position -21 results in a disruption of a hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 binding site in the factor IX promoter.

Hemophilia B Leyden is an X chromosome-linked bleeding disorder characterized by an altered developmental expression of blood coagulation factor IX. This form of hemophilia B has been found to be associated with a variety of single point mutations in the factor IX promoter region. We now describe a novel point mutation, T-->G at position -21, in two related patients with the hemophilia B Leyden phenotype. This mutation lies within the factor IX promoter region (-40 to -9) that contains overlapping binding sites for hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 ( HNF-4) and androgen receptor. Transient transfection assays in HepG2 cells show that the -21 mutation causes a significant reduction in factor IX promoter activity. Gel mobility shift assays and transient cotransfection experiments revealed that the HNF-4-binding site but not the androgen-responsive element is disrupted by the -21 mutation. A comparison of the -21 mutation with the previously described -20 T-->A mutation (associated with the hemophilia B Leyden phenotype) and -26 G-->C mutation (associated with severe hemophilia B throughout life) was made. It shows that the -21 mutation reduced HNF-4 binding and transactivation to a similar level as the -20 mutation, whereas the -26 mutation completely abolished HNF-4 binding and transactivation. Mobility shift experiments indicate that there was no significant difference in binding affinity of recombinant androgen receptor protein for oligonucleotides containing wild-type and -21 or -20 mutated DNA. The binding affinity for the oligonucleotide containing the -26 mutation was twofold lower. The results indicate that the disruption of the HNF-4-binding site by the -21 T-->G mutation is the cause of the bleeding disorder in these two patients. This study adds further support for the notion that the recovery from hemophilia at puberty may not only be related to an intact androgen-responsive element but also to the degree of disruption of the HNF-4-binding site.[1]

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