Clinical and biochemical phenotypes of adults with monoallelic and biallelic CYP24A1 mutations: evidence of gene dose effect
Summary Mutations of the CYP24A1 gene can result in hypercalcemia, hyerpercalciuria, and nephrolithiasis, but disease severity is variable. Clinical and biochemical phenotypes were correlated with gene sequence information in a family with two CYP24A1 mutations. A gene dose effect was apparent with...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Osteoporosis international 2016-10, Vol.27 (10), p.3121-3125 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Summary
Mutations of the
CYP24A1
gene can result in hypercalcemia, hyerpercalciuria, and nephrolithiasis, but disease severity is variable. Clinical and biochemical phenotypes were correlated with gene sequence information in a family with two
CYP24A1
mutations. A gene dose effect was apparent with monoallelic mutations demonstrating milder disease manifestations than biallelic mutations.
Introduction
The objective was to examine the spectrum of clinical and biochemical phenotypes in a family with monoallelic and biallelic mutations of
CYP24A1
after identification of the proband with two mutations of the
CYP24A1
gene: (A) p.R396W and (B) E143del-Het.
Methods
Clinical and biochemical phenotypes were correlated with
CYP24A1
sequence information in the proband and four siblings, a daughter, and two nieces of the proband. The subjects’ medical histories were evaluated, and measurement of serum minerals, vitamin D metabolites, PTH, bone turnover markers, and urinary calcium and sequencing of the
CYP24A1
gene were performed.
Results
The proband had nephrolithiasis, osteopenia, hypercalcemia, hypercalciuria, elevated serum 1,25(OH)
2
D, undetectable 24,25(OH)
2
D, and inappropriately low PTH concentrations. Two subjects with biallelic (A/B) mutations had nephrolithiasis, marked hypercalciuria (583 ± 127 mg/24 h, mean ± SD), compared with five subjects with monoallelic mutations (A or B) with a urine calcium of 265 ± 85 mg/24 h. Two subjects with monoallelic mutations had nephrolithiasis and one had non-PTH dependent hypercalcemia. Five subjects had high 1,25(OH)
2
D measurements, including three with monoallelic mutations. The 25OHD/24,25(OH)
2
D ratio, in subjects with biallelic mutations was 291 versus 19.8 in the subjects with monoallelic mutations.
Conclusions
In this family, adults with
CYP24A1
mutations a gene dose effect is apparent: subjects with biallelic, compound heterozygous mutations (A/B) have a more severe clinical and biochemical phenotype, whereas, subjects with monoallelic mutations demonstrate milder disease manifestations which are not easily characterized through biochemical assessment. |
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ISSN: | 0937-941X 1433-2965 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00198-016-3615-6 |