Novel mutations in the guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase 1 gene associated with DYT5 dystonia |
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Authors: | Ohta Etsuro Funayama Manabu Ichinose Hiroshi Toyoshima Itaru Urano Fumi Matsuo Mitsuhiro Tomoko Nishida Yukihiko Konishi Yoshino Syuji Yokoyama Hiroyuki Shimazu Hideki Maeda Koji Hasegawa Kazuko Obata Fumiya |
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Affiliation: | Division of Clinical Immunology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kitasato University, Department of Neurology, National Sagamihara Hospital, Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan. |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVES: To better understand the relationship between mutation of the guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) gene and the etiology of DYT5 dystonia and to accumulate data on the mutation in the Japanese population for genetic diagnosis of the disease. SETTING: Japanese population. Patients Eight Japanese patients with suspected DYT5 dystonia were analyzed. Intervention Direct genomic sequencing of 6 exons of GCH1 was performed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: For patients who did not exhibit any abnormality in the sequence analysis, the possibility of exon deletions was examined. In cases for which cerebrospinal fluid was available, the concentrations of neopterin and biopterin were measured as an index of GCH1 enzyme activity. RESULTS: In 2 patients, we found a new T106I mutation in exon 1 of GCH1, a position involved in the helix-turn-helix structure of the enzyme. In the third patient, we found a new mutation (a 15-base pair nucleotide deletion) in exon 5 that may cause a frameshift involving the active site. In the fourth patient, we detected a known nucleotide G>A substitution in the splice site of intron 5, which has been reported to produce exon 5-skipped messenger RNA. The concentrations of both neopterin and biopterin in the cerebrospinal fluid of the third and fourth patients were markedly lower than the normal range, indicating that the GCH1 enzyme was functionally abnormal in these mutations. Gene dosage analysis showed that the fifth patient had a deletion of both exon 3 and exon 4, whereas the sixth patient had a deletion of exon 3. CONCLUSIONS: We found several novel, as well as known, GCH1 mutations in Japanese patients with DYT5 dystonia. In some of them, the GCH1 enzyme activity was proved to be impaired. |
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