1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in the proenteropeptidase gene are the molecular cause of congenital enteropeptidase deficiency

Mutations in the proenteropeptidase gene are the molecular cause of congenital enteropeptidase deficiency

  • Am J Hum Genet. 2002 Jan;70(1):20-5. doi: 10.1086/338456.
Andreas Holzinger 1 Esther M Maier Cornelius Bück Peter U Mayerhofer Matthias Kappler James C Haworth Stanley P Moroz Hans-Beat Hadorn J Evan Sadler Adelbert A Roscher
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pediatrics, Division of Clinical Chemistry and Metabolism, Dr. v. Hauner Children's Hospital, Ludwig-Maximilian-University, Munich, Germany. [email protected]
Abstract

Enteropeptidase (enterokinase [E.C.3.4.21.9]) is a serine protease of the intestinal brush border in the proximal small intestine. It activates the pancreatic proenzyme trypsinogen, which, in turn, releases active digestive enzymes from their inactive pancreatic precursors. Congenital Enteropeptidase deficiency is a rare recessively inherited disorder leading, in affected infants, to severe failure to thrive. The genomic structure of the proenteropeptidase gene (25 exons, total gene size 88 kb) was characterized in order to perform DNA sequencing in three clinically and biochemically proved patients with congenital Enteropeptidase deficiency who were from two families. We found compound heterozygosity for nonsense mutations (S712X/R857X) in two affected siblings and found compound heterozygosity for a nonsense mutation (Q261X) and a frameshift mutation (FsQ902) in the third patient. In accordance with the biochemical findings, all four defective alleles identified are predicted null alleles leading to a gene product not containing the active site of the Enzyme. These data provide first evidence that proenteropeptidase-gene mutations are the primary cause of congenital Enteropeptidase deficiency.

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