Identification and Characterization of Temperature-Sensitive Mild Mutations in Three Japanese Patients with Nonsevere Forms of Very-Long-Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency

2002 
Abstract Very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD) deficiency is clinically classified into severe, intermediate, and myopathic forms. We identified mutations in three unrelated Japanese patients with VLCAD deficiency: two with the myopathic form and one with the intermediate form, all compound heterozygotes of K264E/M437V, A416T/1798 delA, and P89S /IVS16-3delAA, respectively. We characterized four missense mutations, K264E, M437V, A416T, and P89S, by transisent expression analysis, using SV40-transformed fibroblasts derived from a VLCAD-null patient, as recipient cells. In transient expression of the wild-type VLCAD cDNA, VLCAD activity at 30°C was higher than at 37°C. Moreover, this temperature-sensitive character is more evident in all the mutant proteins tested than in wild type. Based on characterization of the five missense mutations identified in four Japanese patients, including data on one patient with the myopathic form previously reported, patients with the nonsevere forms (intermediate or myopathic forms) have missense mutations with residual activities in at least one allele. Expression analysis at 30°C may be more useful for evaluating these missense mutations, compared with that at 37°C.
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