ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe
ClinVar: |
c.1703T>A
,
p.Leu568*
?
, not provided
c.1704G>T , p.Leu568Phe ? , not provided |
CF databases: |
c.1704G>T
,
p.Leu568Phe
(CFTR1)
D
, L568F was found in a heterozygous CBAVD patient with yet unidentified mutations on their other alleles.
|
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: D (59%), C: N (61%), D: D (80%), E: D (75%), F: D (63%), G: D (80%), H: D (71%), I: N (93%), K: D (80%), M: N (66%), N: D (71%), P: D (80%), Q: D (66%), R: D (80%), S: D (66%), T: N (72%), V: N (82%), W: D (71%), Y: D (71%), |
Predicted by PROVEAN: | A: D, C: D, D: D, E: D, F: N, G: D, H: D, I: N, K: D, M: N, N: D, P: D, Q: D, R: D, S: D, T: N, V: N, W: D, Y: D, |
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[hide] Two buffer PAGE system-based SSCP/HD analysis: a g... Eur J Hum Genet. 1999 Jul;7(5):590-8. Liechti-Gallati S, Schneider V, Neeser D, Kraemer R
Two buffer PAGE system-based SSCP/HD analysis: a general protocol for rapid and sensitive mutation screening in cystic fibrosis and any other human genetic disease.
Eur J Hum Genet. 1999 Jul;7(5):590-8., [PMID:10439967]
Abstract [show]
The large size of many disease genes and the multiplicity of mutations complicate the design of an adequate assay for the identification of disease-causing variants. One of the most successful methods for mutation detection is the single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) technique. By varying temperature, gel composition, ionic strength and additives, we optimised the sensitivity of SSCP for all 27 exons of the CFTR gene. Using simultaneously SSCP and heteroduplex (HD) analysis, a total of 80 known CF mutations (28 missense, 22 frameshift, 17 nonsense, 13 splicesite) and 20 polymorphisms was analysed resulting in a detection rate of 97.5% including the 24 most common mutations worldwide. The ability of this technique to detect mutations independent of their nature, frequency, and population specificity was confirmed by the identification of five novel mutations (420del9, 1199delG, R560S, A613T, T1299I) in Swiss CF patients, as well as by the detection of 41 different mutations in 198 patients experimentally analysed. We present a three-stage screening strategy allowing analysis of seven exons within 5 hours and analysis of the entire coding region within 1 week, including sequence analysis of the variants. Additionally, our protocol represents a general model for point mutation analysis in other genetic disorders and has already been successfully established for OTC deficiency, collagene deficiency, X-linked myotubular myopathy (XLMTM), Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD, BMD), Wilson disease (WD), Neurofibromatosis I and II, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies, and defects in mitochondrial DNA. No other protocol published so far presents standard SSCP/HD conditions for mutation screening in different disease genes.
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No. Sentence Comment
92 The technique developed demonstrates excellent single-strand separation and non-radioactive visualisation on polyacrylamide gels, and is time-saving and directly Table 2 Known mutations identified in 198 CF patients analysed investigatively Exon (E) Number of CFTR mutations intron (I) chromosomes Patient`s nationality Highest prevalence ∆F508 E10 212 miscellaneous 3905insT E20 025 Swiss Swiss, Amish, Arcadian R553X E11 020 Swiss, German German 1717-1G->A I10 017 Swiss, Italian Italian N1303K E21 011 Swiss, French, Italian Italian W1282X E20 014 Swiss, Italian, Israelit Jewish-Askhenazi G542X E11 009 Swiss, Spanish, Italian Spanish 2347delG E13 008 Swiss R1162X E19 006 Swiss, Italian, Russian Italian 3849+10kbC->T I19 005 German, French R347P E07 004 Swiss T5 I08 004 Swiss R334W E07 003 Swiss Q525X E10 003 Swiss 3732delA E19 003 Swiss S1235R E19 003 Italian, Turkish G85E E03 002 Italian, Greek I148T E04 002 Austrian, Turkish French-Canadian 621+1G->T I04 002 French French-Canadian 1078delT E07 002 Swiss E585X E12 002 Italian 2176insC E13 002 Swiss, Italian 2789+5G->A I14b 002 Italian Spanish D1152H E18 002 Swiss, French 4016insT E21 002 Turkish Q39X E02 001 Swiss 394delTT E03 001 Swiss Nordic, Finnish R117H E04 001 Swiss A120T E04 001 Swiss G126D E04 001 Swiss 711+5G->A I05 001 Russian M348K E07 001 Italian L568F E12 001 Italian 2183AA->G E13 001 Italian Italian K710X E13 001 Swiss S945L E15 001 French 3272-26A.->G I17a 001 Swiss M1101K E17b 001 Swiss Huttite 3601-17C->T I18 001 Swiss R1158X E19 001 Swiss 4005+1G-A I20 001 Italian applicable to early diagnostic testing, carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 10439967:92:1335
status: NEW[hide] Extensive molecular analysis of patients bearing C... J Mol Diagn. 2012 Jan;14(1):81-9. Epub 2011 Oct 20. Amato F, Bellia C, Cardillo G, Castaldo G, Ciaccio M, Elce A, Lembo F, Tomaiuolo R
Extensive molecular analysis of patients bearing CFTR-related disorders.
J Mol Diagn. 2012 Jan;14(1):81-9. Epub 2011 Oct 20., [PMID:22020151]
Abstract [show]
Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-related disorders (CFTR-RDs) may present with pancreatic sufficiency, normal sweat test results, and better outcome. The detection rate of mutations is lower in CFTR-RD than in classic CF: mutations may be located in genes encoding proteins that interact with CFTR or support channel activity. We tested the whole CFTR coding regions in 99 CFTR-RD patients, looking for gene mutations in solute carrier (SLC) 26A and in epithelial Na channel (ENaC) in 33 patients who had unidentified mutations. CFTR analysis revealed 28 mutations, some of which are rare. Of these mutations, RT-PCR demonstrated that the novel 1525-1delG impairs exon 10 splicing; by using minigene analysis, we excluded the splicing effect of three other novel intronic variants. Analysis of SLC26A genes revealed several variants, some of which are novel, that did not affect mRNA expression. Other mutations occurred in the ENaC genes encoding the ENaC subunits, but their frequency did not significantly differ between patients and controls. Our data, although obtained on a preliminary cohort of CFTR-RD patients, exclude a role of mutations in SLC26A and in SCNN genes in the pathogenesis of such disease; we confirm that CFTR analysis has a relevant role in CFTR-RD patients; and it appears mandatory to use CFTR scanning techniques and approaches to reveal the effect of novel mutations.
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No. Sentence Comment
69 Allele Frequency and CFTR Mutations in Patients Bearing CFTR-RDs Mutation (traditional name) HGVS nomenclature15 CBAVD (118 alleles)* RP (42 alleles)* DB (38 alleles)* Total (198 alleles)* TG12-T5-470V 34 (28.8) 2 (4.8) 10 (26.3) 46 (23.2) F508del c.1521_1523del 19 (16.1) 7 (16.7) 4 (10.5) 30 (15.2) 3195del6 c.3063_3069del 9 (7.6) 0 0 9 (4.5) N1303K c.3909CϾG 3 (2.5) 1 (2.4) 4 (10.5) 8 (4.0) G542X c.1624GϾT 4 (3.4) 1 (2.4) 1 (2.6) 6 (3.0) D1152H c.3454GϾC 1 (0.8) 2 (4.8) 2 (5.3) 5 (2.5) G85E c.254GϾA 2 (1.7) 3 (7.1) 0 5 (2.5) 1525-1delG c.1394de 3 (2.5) 1 (2.4) 0 4 (3.0) 4016insT c.3885insT 2 (1.7) 1 (2.4) 0 3 (1.5) 2789ϩ5GϾA c.2657ϩ5GϾA 0 3 (7.1) 0 3 (1.5) Q1476X c.4426CϾT 3 (2.5) 0 0 3 (1.5) 2183AAϾG c.2051_2052delinsG 1 (0.8) 1 (2.4) 0 2 (1.0) R553X c.1657CϾT 1 (0.8) 1 (2.4) 0 2 (1.0) L568F c.1704GϾT 2 (1.7) 0 0 2 (1.0) R1158X c.3472CϾT 2 (1.7) 0 0 2 (1.0) V920M c.2758GϾA 1 (0.8) 0 1 (2.6) 2 (1.0) 711ϩ1GϾT c.579ϩ1GϾT 0 1 (2.4) 0 1 (0.5) D614G c.1841AϾG 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) 2184insA c.2052del 0 1 (2.4) 0 1 (0.5) 621ϩ1GϾT c.489ϩ1GϾT 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) R1438W c.4312CϾT 0 1 (2.4) 0 1 (0.5) E193X c.577GϾT 0 1 (2.4) 0 1 (0.5) G1244E c.3731GϾA 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) K68E c.202AϾG 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) R347P c.1040GϾC 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) 621ϩ3AϾG c.489ϩ3AϾG 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) L997F c.2991GϾC 0 1 (2.4) 0 1 (0.5) F508C c.1523TϾG 1 (0.8) 0 0 1 (0.5) Total 94 (79.7) 28 (66.7) 22 (57.9) 144 (72.7) Undetected 24 (20.3) 14 (33.3) 16 (42.1) 54 (27.3) *Data are given as number (percentage).
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 22020151:69:865
status: NEW144 This detection rate is higher than that reported for other patients affected by CBAVD,20 RP,21-24 or DB.25-28 Most previous studies tested restricted mutation panels for first-level analysis, whereas we used sequencing analysis, and 11 mutations identified in our study (3195del6, Q1476X, L568F, V920M, 1525-1delG, D614G, R1438W, E193X, K68E, 621ϩ3AϾG, and L997F), present in approximately 13% of chromosomes of CFTR-RD patients, are not included in most mutation panels.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 22020151:144:289
status: NEW[hide] Validation of high-resolution DNA melting analysis... J Mol Diagn. 2008 Sep;10(5):424-34. Epub 2008 Aug 7. Audrezet MP, Dabricot A, Le Marechal C, Ferec C
Validation of high-resolution DNA melting analysis for mutation scanning of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene.
J Mol Diagn. 2008 Sep;10(5):424-34. Epub 2008 Aug 7., [PMID:18687795]
Abstract [show]
High-resolution melting analysis of polymerase chain reaction products for mutation scanning, which began in the early 2000s, is based on monitoring of the fluorescence released during the melting of double-stranded DNA labeled with specifically developed saturation dye, such as LC-Green. We report here the validation of this method to scan 98% of the coding sequence of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene. We designed 32 pairs of primers to amplify and analyze the 27 exons of the gene. Thanks to the addition of a small GC-clamp at the 5' ends of the primers, one single melting domain and one identical annealing temperature were obtained to co-amplify all of the fragments. A total of 307 DNA samples, extracted by the salt precipitation method, carrying 221 mutations and 21 polymorphisms, plus 20 control samples free from variations (confirmed by denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography analysis), was used. With the conditions described in this study, 100% of samples that carry heterozygous mutations and 60% of those with homozygous mutations were identified. The study of a cohort of 136 idiopathic chronic pancreatitis patients enabled us to prospectively evaluate this technique. Thus, high-resolution melting analysis is a robust and sensitive single-tube technique for screening mutations in a gene and promises to become the gold standard over denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography, particularly for highly mutated genes such as CFTR, and appears suitable for use in reference diagnostic laboratories.
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No. Sentence Comment
171 Results of CFTR Analysis by HRM on 136 Samples of Patients with Idiopathic Chronic Pancreatitis (ICP) Exon Number of positive samples Mutations identified Variants identified New positive controls 1 14 14 125GϾC 2 1 1 R31C 3 9 1 G85E 7 R75Q 1 R74W 4 4 1 R117G 1 I148T R117G 1 R117H 1 A120T 5 1 1 L188P L188P 6a 5 1 V201M 1 A221A A221A 3 875ϩ40 AϾG 6b 27 1 M284T 26 1001ϩ11CϾT M284T 7 1 1 L320V L320V 8 0 0 9 1 1 D443Y 10 16 8 F508del 8 E528E 11 1 1 G542X 12 6 4 G576A 1 Y577Y L568F 1 L568F 13 7 1 S737F 4 R668C S737F 1 V754M L644L 1 L644L 14a 53 52 T854T T854TϩI853I 1 T854TϩI853I 14b 0 0 15 3 1 L967S T908S 1 T908S 1 S945L 16 0 0 17a 10 7 L997F 1 3271ϩ18CϾT 3271 ϩ 3AϾG 1 3271 ϩ 3 AϾG 1 Y1014C 17b 3 1 L1096L L1096L 1 H1054DϩG1069R 1 3272-33AϾG H1054DϩG1069R 3272-33AϾG 18 2 1 D1152H E1124del 1 E1124del 19 5 5 S1235R poly 20 7 1 W1282X 5 P1290P 1 D1270N 21 2 1 N1303K 1 T1299T 22 0 0 23 1 0 4374ϩ13 AϾG 24 43 40 Q1463Q 2 Y1424Y 1 Q1463QϩY1024Y ing domain of a gene brings an excellent sensitivity for heterozygote detection that is very close to 100%.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 18687795:171:506
status: NEWX
ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 18687795:171:514
status: NEW[hide] Distinct spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in congen... Hum Genet. 1997 Sep;100(3-4):365-77. Dork T, Dworniczak B, Aulehla-Scholz C, Wieczorek D, Bohm I, Mayerova A, Seydewitz HH, Nieschlag E, Meschede D, Horst J, Pander HJ, Sperling H, Ratjen F, Passarge E, Schmidtke J, Stuhrmann M
Distinct spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in congenital absence of vas deferens.
Hum Genet. 1997 Sep;100(3-4):365-77., [PMID:9272157]
Abstract [show]
Congenital absence of the vas deferens (CAVD) is a frequent cause for obstructive azoospermia and accounts for 1%-2% of male infertility. A high incidence of mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene has recently been reported in males with CAVD. We have investigated a cohort of 106 German patients with congenital bilateral or unilateral absence of the vas deferens for mutations in the coding region, flanking intron regions and promotor sequences of the CFTR gene. Of the CAVD patients, 75% carried CFTR mutations or disease-associated CFTR variants, such as the "5T" allele, on both chromosomes. The distribution of mutation genotypes clearly differed from that observed in cystic fibrosis. None of the CAVD patients was homozygous for delta F508 and none was compound heterozygous for delta F508 and a nonsense or frameshift mutation. Instead, homozygosity was found for a few mild missense or splicing mutations, and the majority of CAVD mutations were missense substitutions. Twenty-one German CAVD patients were compound heterozygous for delta F508 and R117H, which was the most frequent CAVD genotype in our study group. Haplotype analysis indicated a common origin for R117H in our population, whereas another frequent CAVD mutation, viz. the "5T allele" was a recurrent mutation on different intragenic haplotypes and multiple ethnic backgrounds. We identified a total of 46 different mutations and variants, of which 15 mutations have not previously been reported. Thirteen novel missense mutations and one unique amino-acid insertion may be confined to the CAVD phenotype. A few splice or missense variants, such as F508C or 1716 G-->A, are proposed here as possible candidate CAVD mutations with an apparently reduced penetrance. Clinical examination of patients with CFTR mutations on both chromosomes revealed elevated sweat chloride concentrations and discrete symptoms of respiratory disease in a subset of patients. Thus, our collaborative study shows that CAVD without renal malformation is a primary genital form of cystic fibrosis in the vast majority of German patients and links the particular expression of clinical symptoms in CAVD with a distinct subset of CFTR mutation genotypes.
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86 The V938G substitution was identified in two unrelated patients, one homozygote with unilateral ab- 368 Table 1A Frequency distribution and haplotypes of CFTR mutations in 106 CAVD patients Mutationa Nucleotide changesb Locationc Frequencyd Haplotypee Referencef 174delA deletion of A at 174 exon 1 1 D3 This study E56K G→A at 298 exon 3 1 B3 This study D58N G→A at 304 exon 3 1 C2 This study D110H G→A at 460 exon 4 2 C2 Dean et al. (1990) R117H G→A at 482 exon 4 24 B6 Dean et al. (1990) A120T G→A at 490 exon 4 1 n.p. Chillón et al. (1994) ̃L138 insertion of CTA after 546 exon 4 1 A2 This study L206W T→G at 749 exon 6a 1 B8 Claustres et al. (1993) M265R T→G at 926 exon 6b 1 A2 Schwarz et al. (pers. comm.) R297W C→T at 1021 exon 7 1 C2 This study 1078delT deletion of T at 1078 exon 7 1 C2 Claustres et al. (1992) R334W C→T at 1132 exon 7 1 B1 Gasparini et al. (1991) R334L G→T at 1133 exon 7 1 D3 This study I336K T→A at 1139 exon 7 1 A2 Cuppens et al. (1993) R347H G→A at 1172 exon 7 3 D1 Cremonesi et al. (1992) L375F A→C at 1257 exon 8 1 B3 Jézéquel et al. (1996) ∆F508 deletion of 3 bp between 1652-1655 exon 10 57 B1 Kerem et al. (1989) G542X G→T at 1756 exon 11 2 B1 Kerem et al. (1990) R553X C→T at 1789 exon 11 1 A4 Cutting et al. (1990) L568F G→T at 1836 exon 12 1 B3 This study 2184insA insertion of A at 2184 exon 13 1 D3 Dörk et al. (1994b) 2789+5 G→A G→A at 2789+5 intron 14b 4 D3 Highsmith et al. (1997) R933S A→T at 2931 exon 15 1 n.p.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 9272157:86:1388
status: NEW96 Three other new missense substitutions, viz. L568F, K1351E and L1388Q, are located within or flanking the CFTR nucleotide-binding domains (NBD).
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 9272157:96:45
status: NEW97 L568F was detected in a CBAVD male of Turkish descent.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 9272157:97:0
status: NEW137 Complex alleles are indicated a One CF allele with R75X and 125G→C b One CBAVD allele with R75Q and R933S c One CBAVD allele with 5T and Q1352H d Two CF alleles with F508C and S1251N e One CF allele with 1716G→A and L619S f G576A and R668C were linked on two CBAVD and three CF alleles, whereas two additional CF alleles carried R668C together with the 3849+10kB C→T mutation (Dörk and Stuhrmann 1995) 371 Table 3 CFTR mutation genotypes in 106 males with CAVD Genotype PolyT Frequency Ethnic descent Diagnosis ∆F508/R117H 9/7 21 German, Austrian 20 CBAVD, 1 CUAVD ∆F508/5T 9/5 9 German, Austrian 8 CBAVD, 1 CUAVD ∆F508/F508C 9/7 3 German CBAVD ∆F508/R347H 9/9 2 German CBAVD ∆F508/1716 G→A 9/7 2 German CBAVD ∆F508/3272-26 A→G 9/7 2 German CBAVD ∆F508/E56K 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/M265R 9/7 1 German-Portuguese CBAVD ∆F508/R334W 9/9 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/T351S 9/9 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/L375F 9/7 1 Volga German CBAVD ∆F508/G576A & R668C 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/R933S 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/L997F 9/9 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/Y1032C 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/D1152H 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/K1351E 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/D1377H 9/7 1 Portuguese CBAVD ∆F508/L1388Q 9/7 1 German CBAVD ∆F508/unknown 9/7 4 German 3 CBAVD, 1 CUAVD 5T/5T 5/5 2 German CBAVD 5T/G542X 5/9 2 German, Turkish CBAVD 5T/D58N 5/7 1 Lebanese CBAVD 5T/̃L138 5/7 1 German-Polish CBAVD 5T/1078delT 5/7 1 German CBAVD 5T/R553X 5/7 1 German CBAVD 5T/2184insA 5/7 1 Turkish CBAVD 5T/D979A 5/7 1 Vietnamese CBAVD 5T/D1152H 5/7 1 Turkish CBAVD 5T/3659delC 5/7 1 German CBAVD 5T/S1235R 5/7 1 Greek CBAVD 5T/W1282X 5/7 1 German CBAVD 5T & Q1352H/ R297W & Q1352H 5/7 1 Vietnamese CBAVD 5T/unknown 5/7 1 German CBAVD R117H/L206W 7/9 1 German CBAVD R117H/2789+5 G→A 7/7 1 German CBAVD R117H/unknown 7/7 1 German CBAVD 2789+5 G→A/2789+5 G→A 7/7 1 Lebanese CBAVD 2789+5 G→A/L973F 7/7 1 German CBAVD V938G/V938G 7/7 1 Greek CBAVD V938G/174delA 7/7 1 German CBAVD D110H/D110H 7/7 1 Turkish CBAVD R334L/I336K 7/7 1 German CBAVD R347H/N1303K 9/9 1 German CBAVD L568F/D1152H 7/7 1 Turkish CBAVD 3272-26 A→G/V1153E 7/7 1 German CBAVD R75Q/unknown 7/7 1 German CBAVD A120T/unknown 9/7 1 German CBAVD 1716G→A/unknown 7/7 1 German CBAVD G576A & R668C/unknown 7/7 1 German CBAVD 2752-15 C→G/unknown 7/7 1 Iranian CBAVD Unknown/unknown 17 German, Turkish 7 CBAVD and 1 CUAVD without observed renal agenesis, 9 CBAVD with renal agenesis allele and the R297W mutation on a homozygous Q1352H background may then reduce CFTR function to a disease-causing level.
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ABCC7 p.Leu568Phe 9272157:137:2227
status: NEW