Meissner P N, Dailey T A, Hift R J, Ziman M, Corrigall A V, Roberts A G, Meissner D M, Kirsch R E, Dailey H A
Lennox Eales Porphyria Laboratories, MRC/UCT Liver Research Centre, University of Cape Town Dept. of Medicine, South Africa.
Nat Genet. 1996 May;13(1):95-7. doi: 10.1038/ng0596-95.
Variegate porphyria (VP), a low-penetrant autosomal dominant inherited disorder of haem metabolism, is characterised by photosensitivity (Fig. 1) and a propensity to develop acute neuropsychiatric attacks with abdominal pain, vomiting, constipation, tachycardia, hypertension, psychiatric symptoms and, in the worst cases, quadriplegia. Acute attacks, often precipitated by inappropriate drug therapy, are potentially fatal. While earlier workers thought the distal haem biosynthetic enzyme ferrochelatase may be involved in the genesis of VP, it was shown in the early 1980's, and is now accepted, that VP is associated with decreased protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity (PPO) (E.C.1.3.3.4). VP prevalence is much higher in South Africa than elsewhere; probably due to a founder effect with patients descending from a 17th century Dutch immigrant. PPO cDNAs from Bacillus subtilis, Myxococcus xanthus, human placenta and mouse liver have been cloned, sequenced and expressed. Human and mouse cDNAs consist of open reading frames 1431 nucleotides long, encoding a 477 amino acid protein. The human PPO gene contains thirteen exons, spanning approximately 4.5 kb. We have identified a C to T transition in codon 59 (in exon 3) resulting in an arginine to tryptophan substitution (R59W). A protein expressed from an in vitro-mutagenized PPO construct exhibits substantially less activity than the wild type. The R59W mutation was present in 43 of 45 patients with VP from 26 of 27 South African families investigated, but not in 34 unaffected relatives or 9 unrelated British patients with PPO deficiency. Since at least one of these families is descended from the founder of South African VP, this defect may represent the founder gene defect associated causally with VP in South Africa.
混合型卟啉病(VP)是一种遗传性血色素代谢紊乱的常染色体显性疾病,发病率较低,其特征为光敏性(图1),并有发展为急性神经精神发作的倾向,伴有腹痛、呕吐、便秘、心动过速、高血压、精神症状,最严重时会出现四肢瘫痪。急性发作通常由不适当的药物治疗引发,可能致命。早期研究人员认为远端血色素生物合成酶铁螯合酶可能与VP的发病机制有关,但在20世纪80年代早期发现,现在也已被认可的是,VP与原卟啉原氧化酶(PPO)活性降低(E.C.1.3.3.4)有关。VP在南非的患病率远高于其他地区;这可能是由于17世纪荷兰移民后裔患者中的奠基者效应。来自枯草芽孢杆菌、黄色粘球菌、人胎盘和小鼠肝脏的PPO cDNA已被克隆、测序和表达。人和小鼠的cDNA由1431个核苷酸长的开放阅读框组成,编码一种477个氨基酸的蛋白质。人PPO基因包含13个外显子,跨度约为4.5 kb。我们在密码子59(外显子3)中发现了一个C到T的转换,导致精氨酸被色氨酸取代(R59W)。从体外诱变的PPO构建体表达的蛋白质活性明显低于野生型。在调查的27个南非家族中的26个家族的45例VP患者中,有43例存在R59W突变,但在34名未受影响的亲属或9名无PPO缺乏症的英国无关患者中未发现该突变。由于这些家族中至少有一个是南非VP奠基者的后裔,这种缺陷可能代表了在南非与VP有因果关系的奠基者基因缺陷。