New mutations in the Wilson disease gene, ATP7B: implications for molecular testing.

Article Details

Citation

Davies LP, Macintyre G, Cox DW

New mutations in the Wilson disease gene, ATP7B: implications for molecular testing.

Genet Test. 2008 Mar;12(1):139-45. doi: 10.1089/gte.2007.0072.

PubMed ID
18373411 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Wilson disease (WND), an autosomal recessive disorder of copper transport with a broad range of genotypic and phenotypic characteristics, results from mutations in the ATP7B gene. ATP7B encodes a copper transporting P-type ATPase involved in the transport of copper into the plasma protein ceruloplasmin, and for excretion of copper from the liver. Defects in ATP7B lead to copper storage in liver, brain and kidney. Mutation analysis was carried out on 300 WND patients of various origins, and new mutations not previously reported were identified: European white (p.L217X, c.918_931, c.1073delG, c.3082_3085delAAGAinsCG, p.V536A, p.S657R, p.A971V, p.T974M, p.Q1004P, p.D1164N, p.E1173G, p.I1230V, p.M1359I, c.2355+4A>G), Sephardic Jewish (p.Q286X), Filipino (p.G1149A), Lebanese (p.R1228T), Japanese (p.D1267V) and Taiwanese (p.A1328T). All but one missense variant have strong evidence for classification as disease-causing mutations. In the patients reported here, we also identified 20 nucleotide substitutions, six not previously reported, which cause silent amino acid changes or intronic changes. Documentation and characterization of all variants is essential for accurate DNA diagnosis in WND because of the wide range of clinical and biochemical variability.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Copper-transporting ATPase 2P35670Details