Carmen and Ann Adams Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Michigan, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201, USA; Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Department of Pathology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201, USA; Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Detroit Medical Center University Laboratories, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Mol Genet Metab. 2014 Jul;112(3):242-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2014.04.002. Epub 2014 Apr 16.
Biotinidase deficiency (BD) is an autosomal recessive disorder resulting in the inability to recycle the vitamin biotin. Individuals with biotinidase deficiency can develop neurological and cutaneous symptoms if they are not treated with biotin. To date, more than 165 mutations in the biotinidase gene (BTD) have been reported. Essentially all the mutations result in enzymatic activities with less than 10% of mean normal serum enzyme activity (profound biotinidase deficiency) with the exception of the c.1330G>C (p.D444H) mutation, which results in an enzyme having 50% of mean normal serum activity and causes partial biotinidase deficiency (10-30% of mean normal serum biotinidase activity) if there is a mutation for profound biotinidase deficiency on the second allele. We now reported eight novel mutations in ten children identified by newborn screening in Michigan from 1988 to the end of 2012. Interestingly, one intronic mutation, c.310-15delT, results in an approximately two-fold down-regulation of BTD mRNA expression by Quantitative real-time reverse-transcription PCR (qRT-PCR). This is the first report of an intronic mutation in the BTD gene with demonstration of its effect on enzymatic activity by altering mRNA expression. This study identified three other mutations likely to cause partial biotinidase deficiency. These results emphasize the importance of full gene sequencing of BTD on patients with biotinidase deficiency to better understand the genotype and phenotype correlation in the future.
生物素酶缺乏症(BD)是一种常染色体隐性遗传病,导致维生素生物素无法循环利用。如果未经生物素治疗,生物素酶缺乏症患者可能会出现神经和皮肤症状。迄今为止,已经在生物素酶基因(BTD)中报告了超过 165 种突变。基本上所有的突变都会导致酶活性降低,低于正常血清酶活性的 10%(严重生物素酶缺乏症),除了 c.1330G>C(p.D444H)突变,该突变导致酶的活性为正常血清活性的 50%,并在第二个等位基因上存在严重生物素酶缺乏症突变时导致部分生物素酶缺乏症(正常血清生物素酶活性的 10-30%)。我们现在报道了在 1988 年至 2012 年底期间,通过密歇根州新生儿筛查发现的 10 名儿童中的 8 种新突变。有趣的是,一个内含子突变 c.310-15delT 通过定量实时逆转录 PCR(qRT-PCR)导致 BTD mRNA 表达下调约两倍。这是 BTD 基因中第一个报道的内含子突变,通过改变 mRNA 表达证明其对酶活性的影响。本研究鉴定了另外三个可能导致部分生物素酶缺乏症的突变。这些结果强调了对生物素酶缺乏症患者进行 BTD 全基因测序的重要性,以便将来更好地了解基因型和表型相关性。