Molecular analysis of HEXA gene in Argentinean patients affected with Tay–Sachs disease: Possible common origin of the prevalent c.459+5A>G mutation

Tay–Sachs disease (TSD) is a recessively inherited disorder caused by the deficient activity of hexosaminidase A due to mutations in the HEXA gene. Up to date there is no information regarding the molecular genetics of TSD in Argentinean patients. In the present study we have studied 17 Argentinean...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gene 2012-05, Vol.499 (2), p.262-265
Hauptverfasser: Zampieri, Stefania, Montalvo, Annalisa, Blanco, Mariana, Zanin, Irene, Amartino, Hernan, Vlahovicek, Kristian, Szlago, Marina, Schenone, Andrea, Pittis, Gabriela, Bembi, Bruno, Dardis, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tay–Sachs disease (TSD) is a recessively inherited disorder caused by the deficient activity of hexosaminidase A due to mutations in the HEXA gene. Up to date there is no information regarding the molecular genetics of TSD in Argentinean patients. In the present study we have studied 17 Argentinean families affected by TSD, including 20 patients with the acute infantile form and 3 with the sub-acute form. Overall, we identified 14 different mutations accounting for 100% of the studied alleles. Eight mutations were novel: 5 were single base changes leading to drastic residue changes or truncated proteins, 2 were small deletions and one was an intronic mutation that may cause a splicing defect. Although the spectrum of mutations was highly heterogeneous, a high frequency of the c.459+5G>A mutation, previously described in different populations was found among the studied cohort. Haplotype analysis suggested that in these families the c.459+5G>A mutation might have arisen by a single mutational event. ► First study of HEXA gene in 17 Argentinean unrelated families with Tay–Sachs. ► Identification of 8 novel mutations. ► The c.459+5A>G mutation accounts for 26.6% of the alleles. ► Haplotype analysis suggests a common origin of the prevalent c.459+5A>G mutation.
ISSN:0378-1119
1879-0038
DOI:10.1016/j.gene.2012.03.022