Formstone C J, Hallam P J, Tuddenham E G, Voke J, Layton M, Nicolaides K, Hann I M, Cooper D N
Department of Biochemistry, Imperial College, London, UK.
Blood. 1996 May 1;87(9):3731-7.
Molecular genetic and phenotypic analyses were performed in a highly unusual case of combined protein S and protein C deficiency manifesting in a family in which a child had died perinatally from renal vein thrombosis. Antenatal diagnosis in a second pregnancy was initially performed by indirect restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) tracking using a neutral dimorphism within the PROS gene and served to exclude severe protein S deficiency. Am umbilical vein blood sample at 22 weeks gestation showed isolated protein C deficiency. This pregnancy proceeded to a full-term delivery without thrombotic complications. Molecular genetic analysis of the PROC and PROS gene segregating in the family then yielded one PROC gene lesion in the father and two PROS gene lesions, one in each parent. These lesions were shown to segregate with the respective deficiency states through the family pedigree. Analysis of DNA from paraffin-embedded liver tissue taken from the deceased child showed the presence of both PROS mutations, as well as the PROC mutation. Genotypic analysis of the second child showed a PROC mutation, but neither PROS mutation consistent with its possession of normal protein S levels and a low/borderline protein C level. Antenatal diagnosis was then performed in a third pregnancy by direct mutation detection. However, although the fetus carried only the paternal PROS and PROC gene lesions, the child developed renal thrombosis in utero. It may be that a further genetic lesion at a third locus still remains to be defined. Alternatively, the intrauterine development of thrombosis in this infant could have been caused, at least in part by a transplacental thrombotic stimulus arising in the protein S-deficient maternal circulation. This analysis may, therefore, serve as a warning against extrapolating too readily from genotype to phenotype in families with a complex thrombotic disorder.
对一个极为罕见的蛋白S和蛋白C联合缺乏病例进行了分子遗传学和表型分析。该病例出现在一个家庭中,其中一名儿童在围产期死于肾静脉血栓形成。在第二次怀孕时,最初通过使用PROS基因内的中性二态性进行间接限制性片段长度多态性(RFLP)追踪来进行产前诊断,以排除严重的蛋白S缺乏。妊娠22周时采集的脐静脉血样本显示孤立的蛋白C缺乏。此次妊娠足月分娩,无血栓形成并发症。对该家族中PROC和PROS基因的分子遗传学分析发现,父亲有一个PROC基因病变,父母双方各有一个PROS基因病变。通过家族谱系显示,这些病变与各自的缺乏状态相关。对取自已故儿童的石蜡包埋肝组织的DNA分析显示,同时存在两种PROS突变以及PROC突变。对第二个孩子的基因分型分析显示有一个PROC突变,但没有PROS突变,这与其蛋白S水平正常而蛋白C水平低/临界相符。然后在第三次怀孕时通过直接突变检测进行产前诊断。然而,尽管胎儿仅携带父系的PROS和PROC基因病变,但该儿童在子宫内发生了肾血栓形成。可能仍有待确定第三个位点的进一步基因病变。或者,该婴儿子宫内血栓形成的发展至少部分可能是由蛋白S缺乏的母体循环中产生的经胎盘血栓形成刺激所引起。因此,该分析可能警示人们,对于患有复杂血栓形成疾病的家族,不要轻易从基因型推断表型。