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Transcobalamin codon 259 polymorphism in HT-29 and Caco-2 cells and in Caucasians: relation to transcobalamin and homocysteine concentration in blood

Authors :
Farès Namour
Renée Debard
Jean-Louis Guéant
Charles Adjalla
Idrissia Abdelmouttaleb
Colette Salvat
Jean-Luc Olivier
Source :
Blood. 97:1092-1098
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2001.

Abstract

Transcobalamin (TC) is the plasma transporter that delivers vitamin B12 to cells. We have already reported that HT-29 and Caco-2 cells secrete different TC variants. HT-29 secretes 2 TC isoproteins (codon 259-Pro/Arg [259-P/R]), exhibiting unequal concentrations (TC 259-P > TC 259-R), and Caco-2 cells only secrete the phenotype 259-R. We investigated the relation between phenotypic and genetic TC polymorphism in HT-29 cells transfected with Caco-2 TC complementary DNA and in 159 healthy Caucasians. We found that codon 259-R is buried and, thus, the genetic polymorphism provides no explanation why the TCs from HT-29 and Caco-2 cells have different isoelectric points in nondenaturing isoelectric focusing (IEF). The newly translated TC in HT-29 cells from the Caco-2 complementary DNA recombinant plasmid had the same isoelectric point as the TC constitutively expressed in HT-29 cells, suggesting that TC phenotypic variability involves a specific cell folding of the protein. The codon 259 polymorphism was found to have a biallelic distribution: homozygotes P = 34.6%, heterozygotes R/P = 47.8%, and homozygotes R = 17.6%. In heterozygous samples, the IEF showed that the TC 259-P/TC 259-R ratio = 1.6. The blood apo-TC concentration of 259-P homozygous Caucasians was significantly higher than that of homozygous 259-R (P

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Volume :
97
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2426eb1b99c0f2a139ee559686cfdca2