1. Academic Validation
  2. Identification of the gene responsible for methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria, cblC type

Identification of the gene responsible for methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria, cblC type

  • Nat Genet. 2006 Jan;38(1):93-100. doi: 10.1038/ng1683.
Jordan P Lerner-Ellis 1 Jamie C Tirone Peter D Pawelek Carole Doré Janet L Atkinson David Watkins Chantal F Morel T Mary Fujiwara Emily Moras Angela R Hosack Gail V Dunbar Hana Antonicka Vince Forgetta C Melissa Dobson Daniel Leclerc Roy A Gravel Eric A Shoubridge James W Coulton Pierre Lepage Johanna M Rommens Kenneth Morgan David S Rosenblatt
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Human Genetics, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3G 1B1.
Abstract

Methylmalonic aciduria and homocystinuria, cblC type (OMIM 277400), is the most common inborn error of vitamin B(12) (cobalamin) metabolism, with about 250 known cases. Affected individuals have developmental, hematological, neurological, metabolic, ophthalmologic and dermatologic clinical findings. Although considered a disease of infancy or childhood, some individuals develop symptoms in adulthood. The cblC locus was mapped to chromosome region 1p by linkage analysis. We refined the chromosomal interval using homozygosity mapping and haplotype analyses and identified the MMACHC gene. In 204 individuals, 42 different mutations were identified, many consistent with a loss of function of the protein product. One mutation, 271dupA, accounted for 40% of all disease alleles. Transduction of wild-type MMACHC into immortalized cblC fibroblast cell lines corrected the cellular phenotype. Molecular modeling predicts that the C-terminal region of the gene product folds similarly to TonB, a Bacterial protein involved in energy transduction for cobalamin uptake.

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