Mutations in PCYT1A cause spondylometaphyseal dysplasia with cone-rod dystrophy.

Article Details

Citation

Yamamoto GL, Baratela WA, Almeida TF, Lazar M, Afonso CL, Oyamada MK, Suzuki L, Oliveira LA, Ramos ES, Kim CA, Passos-Bueno MR, Bertola DR

Mutations in PCYT1A cause spondylometaphyseal dysplasia with cone-rod dystrophy.

Am J Hum Genet. 2014 Jan 2;94(1):113-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.11.022.

PubMed ID
24387991 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Spondylometaphyseal dysplasia with cone-rod dystrophy is a rare autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by severe short stature, progressive lower-limb bowing, flattened vertebral bodies, metaphyseal involvement, and visual impairment caused by cone-rod dystrophy. Whole-exome sequencing of four individuals affected by this disorder from two Brazilian families identified two previously unreported homozygous mutations in PCYT1A. This gene encodes the alpha isoform of the phosphate cytidylyltransferase 1 choline enzyme, which is responsible for converting phosphocholine into cytidine diphosphate-choline, a key intermediate step in the phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis pathway. A different enzymatic defect in this pathway has been previously associated with a muscular dystrophy with mitochondrial structural abnormalities that does not have cartilage and/or bone or retinal involvement. Thus, the deregulation of the phosphatidylcholine pathway may play a role in multiple genetic diseases in humans, and further studies are necessary to uncover its precise pathogenic mechanisms and the entirety of its phenotypic spectrum.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Choline-phosphate cytidylyltransferase AP49585Details