Detection of a single base substitution of the gene for prothrombin Tokushima. The application of PCR-SSCP for the genetic and molecular analysis of dysprothrombinemia.

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Citation

Iwahana H, Yoshimoto K, Shigekiyo T, Shirakami A, Saito S, Itakura M

Detection of a single base substitution of the gene for prothrombin Tokushima. The application of PCR-SSCP for the genetic and molecular analysis of dysprothrombinemia.

Int J Hematol. 1992 Feb;55(1):93-100.

PubMed ID
1349838 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The genetic and molecular basis of a mutant prothrombin of 'prothrombin Tokushima' was studied by polymerase chain reaction-single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) and PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) analyses. The abnormal gene was detected by altered migration by PCR-SSCP and by the loss of an MspI site by PCR-RFLP. The gene for prothrombin Tokushima was shown to be inherited from the mother of the proband. Sequencing analysis using PCR-amplified genomic DNA clarified a substitution of thymine (T) for cytosine (C) at position 9,490, changing arginine (Arg) to tryptophan (Trp) at position 418 of the polypeptide chain. This point mutation is assumed to be the molecular basis of prothrombin Tokushima, firstly, because of the absence of distinct changes in Southern blot analysis of the proband's DNA (using a full-length human prothrombin cDNA as a probe), secondly, because it has the same molecular weight as the abnormal gene product, and, thirdly, because of the absence of other amino acid abnormalities in the proteolytic peptide-fragments. It is concluded that PCR-SSCP and PCR-RFLP were useful for detecting the abnormal gene and for directly diagnosing the carrier status of dysprothrombinemia. This is the first report of gene analysis of dysprothrombinemia.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
ProthrombinP00734Details