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A 40-base-pair duplication in the gp91-phox gene leading to X-linked chronic granulomatous disease

Authors :
Anders Åhlin
Jan Palmblad
Ulf Sundin
Lennart Hammarström
C. I. Edvard Smith
Hodjattallah Rabbani
Dirk Roos
Martin de Boer
Göran Elinder
Source :
Europe PubMed Central
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is characterized by the inability of the patients' phagocytic leukocytes to generate superoxide. Therefore, these cells fail to kill certain bacteria and fungi. As a result, patients with CGD suffer from recurrent, life-threatening infections with these micro-organisms. Superoxide is produced by NADPH oxidase, a multicomponent enzyme exclusively present in phagocytic leukocytes. The most common form of CGD is X-linked, originating from a deficiency of the high-molecular-weight subunit of cytochrome b558 (gp91-phox). Here we describe a patient suffering from X-linked CGD due to a 40-base-pair duplication in exon 7 of the CYBB gene coding for gp91-phox, predicting a frameshift, substitution of 22 amino acids and a premature stop codon at amino-acid position 253. The mother as well as the grandmother of this patient were proven to be heterozygous for this mutation; the father and sister were normal. However, the great-grandmother proved to have normal oxidative functions, suggesting that the mutation occurred three generations ago. This is the first description of a nucleotide duplication leading to CGD.

Details

ISSN :
16000609 and 09024441
Volume :
51
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Haematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ed7f193291382eaedbbe5ae0f3ecfef1