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

Qualitative and quantitative analysis of the effect of splicing mutations in propionic acidemia underlying non-severe phenotypes.

In this work we analyze splicing mutations identified in propionic acidemia patients to clarify their functional effects and their involvement in the disease phenotype. Two mutations in the PCCA gene detected in homozygous patients and involving consensus splice sequences (IVS21+3del4 and IVS22-2A>G) were shown to produce some normal splicing in patients' cells, at very low levels, which were quantitated by real-time PCR methods, and which presumably are sufficient to moderate the phenotype. We have also analysed the effect of mutations c.653A>G and IVS10-11del6 in the PCCB gene present in heterozygous patients with mild phenotype. The c.653A>G mutation is located in the last codon of exon 6 and interferes with the correct spliceosomal assembly activating a cryptic splice site within exon 6, which leads to an in-frame six-nucleotide deletion (delV217-K218). Minigene analysis and sequence-specific hybridization probes using real-time PCR methods showed that no normally spliced transcript is detectable in the patients' fibroblasts. The IVS10-11del6 mutation shortens the polypyrimidine tract of the 3'-splice site of exon 11, resulting in exon skipping. Some normal transcript is detectable by allele-specific hybridization probes. These analyses suggest that, in some cases, the regulation of gene splicing can potentially play an important role in human disease influencing phenotypic parameters.[1]

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