Difficulties in the Mutation Analysis of Plasminogen Gene: A Study in Two Patients with Ligneous Conjunctivitis

The absence or very low levels of plasminogen cause a rare disabling disease called ligneous conjunctivitis, characterized by the growth of fibrin-rich pseudomembranes in the conjunctiva and on other mucosal surfaces. Several mutations have been detected in the plasminogen gene of patients affected...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and applied thrombosis/hemostasis 2006-01, Vol.12 (1), p.77-84
Hauptverfasser: Sartori, Maria Teresa, Saggiorato, Graziella, Pellati, Donatella, Dal Bello, Federico, Lombardi, Anna Maria, Opocher, Giuseppe, Spiezia, Luca, Girolami, Antonio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The absence or very low levels of plasminogen cause a rare disabling disease called ligneous conjunctivitis, characterized by the growth of fibrin-rich pseudomembranes in the conjunctiva and on other mucosal surfaces. Several mutations have been detected in the plasminogen gene of patients affected with ligneous conjunctivitis. The human plasminogen gene, located on chromosome 6, has a marked homology with the genes belonging to the plasminogenapo(a) family, and with a number of pseudogenes and plasminogen-like genes located on chromosome 2. This work describes a series of nucleotide variations related to genes other than the plasminogen one, found during the genetic characterization of plasminogen defect in two unrelated patients with ligneous conjunctivitis. The results of automated sequences of each exon and intron-exon boundaries were compared with those of the human plasminogen gene from the NCBI gene bank. In particular, a co-amplified gene on chromosome 2 mimicking a 14 bp deletion in exon 5 of the plasminogen gene was identified by sequencing two different bands obtained from a long run of the PCR exon 5 product in NuSieve agarose gel, and by PstI restriction enzyme analysis of the same amplicons. Moreover, 21 single nucleotide exchanges due to plasminogen-like genes co-amplification were observed, namely one in exon 1, two in exon 4, three in exons 3, 5 and 16, four in exon 13, and five in exon 17. In conclusion, these data confirm the difficulty of plasminogen genetic analysis and may help researchers to better identify the true plasminogen gene mutations causing molecular defects.
ISSN:1076-0296
1938-2723
DOI:10.1177/107602960601200112