Marcadier Julien L, Boland Margaret, Scott C Ronald, Issa Kheirie, Wu Zaining, McIntyre Adam D, Hegele Robert A, Geraghty Michael T, Lines Matthew A
Department of Genetics (Marcadier), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (Boland), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Department of Pediatrics (Boland, Issa, Geraghty, Lines), University of Ottawa and Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Pediatrics (Scott, Wu), University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.; Robarts Research Institute (McIntyre, Hegele), Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, Western University, London, Ont.; Metabolics (Geraghty, Lines), Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ. 2015 Feb 3;187(2):102-107. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.140657. Epub 2014 Dec 1.
Congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency is a rare hereditary cause of chronic diarrhea in children. People with this condition lack the intestinal brush-border enzyme required for digestion of di- and oligosaccharides, including sucrose and isomaltose, leading to malabsorption. Although the condition is known to be highly prevalent (about 5%-10%) in several Inuit populations, the genetic basis for this has not been described. We sought to identify a common mutation for congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency in the Inuit population.
We sequenced the sucrase-isomaltase gene, SI, in a single Inuit proband with congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency who had severe fermentative diarrhea and failure to thrive. We then genotyped a further 128 anonymized Inuit controls from a variety of locales in the Canadian Arctic to assess for a possible founder effect.
In the proband, we identified a novel, homozygous frameshift mutation, c.273_274delAG (p.Gly92Leufs*8), predicted to result in complete absence of a functional protein product. This change was very common among the Inuit controls, with an observed allele frequency of 17.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] 12.6%-21.8%). The predicted Hardy-Weinberg prevalence of congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency in Inuit people, based on this single founder allele, is 3.0% (95% CI 1.4%-4.5%), which is comparable with previous estimates.
We found a common mutation, SI c.273_274delAG, to be responsible for the high prevalence of congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency among Inuit people. Targeted mutation testing for this allele should afford a simple and minimally invasive means of diagnosing this condition in Inuit patients with chronic diarrhea.
先天性蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶缺乏症是儿童慢性腹泻的一种罕见遗传病因。患有这种疾病的人缺乏消化二糖和寡糖(包括蔗糖和异麦芽糖)所需的肠刷状缘酶,导致吸收不良。尽管已知这种疾病在几个因纽特人群中非常普遍(约5%-10%),但其遗传基础尚未得到描述。我们试图在因纽特人群中确定先天性蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶缺乏症的常见突变。
我们对一名患有先天性蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶缺乏症且有严重发酵性腹泻和发育不良的因纽特先证者的蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶基因(SI)进行了测序。然后,我们对来自加拿大北极地区不同地点的另外128名匿名因纽特对照进行了基因分型,以评估可能的奠基者效应。
在先证者中,我们发现了一种新的纯合移码突变,c.273_274delAG(p.Gly92Leufs*8),预计会导致功能性蛋白质产物完全缺失。这种变化在因纽特对照中非常常见,观察到的等位基因频率为17.2%(95%置信区间[CI]12.6%-21.8%)。基于这一单奠基者等位基因,因纽特人中先天性蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶缺乏症的预测哈迪-温伯格患病率为3.0%(95%CI 1.4%-4.5%),与先前的估计相当。
我们发现一个常见突变SI c.273_274delAG是因纽特人群中先天性蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶缺乏症高患病率的原因。对该等位基因进行靶向突变检测应为诊断患有慢性腹泻的因纽特患者提供一种简单且微创的方法。