1. Academic Validation
  2. Molecular basis of glutathione reductase deficiency in human blood cells

Molecular basis of glutathione reductase deficiency in human blood cells

  • Blood. 2007 Apr 15;109(8):3560-6. doi: 10.1182/blood-2006-08-042531.
Nanne M Kamerbeek 1 Rob van Zwieten Martin de Boer Gert Morren Herma Vuil Natalja Bannink Carsten Lincke Koert M Dolman Katja Becker R Heiner Schirmer Stephan Gromer Dirk Roos
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Sanquin Research and Landsteiner Laboratory, Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Plesmanlaan 125, 1066 CX Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Abstract

Hereditary glutathione reductase (GR) deficiency was found in only 2 cases when testing more than 15 000 blood samples. We have investigated the blood cells of 2 patients (1a and 1b) in a previously described family suffering from favism and cataract and of a novel patient (2) presenting with severe neonatal jaundice. Red blood cells and leukocytes of the patients in family 1 did not contain any GR activity, and the GR protein was undetectable by Western blotting. Owing to a 2246-bp deletion in the patients' DNA, translated GR is expected to lack almost the complete dimerization domain, which results in unstable and inactive Enzyme. The red blood cells from patient 2 did not exhibit GR activity either, but the patient's leukocytes contained some residual activity that correlated with a weak protein expression. Patient 2 was found to be a compound heterozygote, with a premature stop codon on one allele and a substitution of glycine 330, a highly conserved residue in the superfamily of NAD(P)H-dependent disulfide reductases, into alanine on the other allele. Studies on recombinant GR G330A revealed a drastically impaired thermostability of the protein. This is the first identification of mutations in the GR gene causing clinical GR deficiency.

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