ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys
ClinVar: |
c.3095A>G
,
p.Tyr1032Cys
D
, Likely pathogenic
c.3094T>A , p.Tyr1032Asn ? , not provided |
CF databases: |
c.3095A>G
,
p.Tyr1032Cys
(CFTR1)
D
, Mutation Y1032C was identified in a German CBAVD patient who is heterozygous for Y1032C and for the [delta]F508 deletion.
c.3094T>A , p.Tyr1032Asn (CFTR1) ? , This mutation was identified on one CF chromosome of Italian origin, G542X mutation was identified on the second allele |
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: D (66%), C: D (63%), D: D (91%), E: D (91%), F: N (66%), G: D (75%), H: D (80%), I: D (59%), K: D (91%), L: D (66%), M: D (63%), N: D (85%), P: D (91%), Q: D (80%), R: D (85%), S: D (75%), T: D (80%), V: D (59%), W: D (71%), |
Predicted by PROVEAN: | A: D, C: D, D: D, E: D, F: N, G: D, H: D, I: D, K: D, L: D, M: D, N: D, P: D, Q: D, R: D, S: D, T: D, V: D, W: D, |
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[hide] Genetic and clinical features of false-negative in... Acta Paediatr. 2002;91(1):82-7. Padoan R, Genoni S, Moretti E, Seia M, Giunta A, Corbetta C
Genetic and clinical features of false-negative infants in a neonatal screening programme for cystic fibrosis.
Acta Paediatr. 2002;91(1):82-7., [PMID:11883825]
Abstract [show]
A study was performed on the delayed diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF) in infants who had false-negative results in a neonatal screening programme. The genetic and clinical features of false-negative infants in this screening programme were assessed together with the efficiency of the screening procedure in the Lombardia region. In total, 774,687 newborns were screened using a two-step immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) (in the years 1990-1992), IRT/IRT + delF508 (1993-1998) or IRT/IRT + polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and oligonucleotide ligation assay (OLA) protocol (1998-1999). Out of 196 CF children born in the 10 y period 15 were false negative on screening (7.6%) and molecular analysis showed a high variability in the genotypes. The cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene mutations identified were delF508, D1152H, R1066C, R334W, G542X, N1303K, F1052V, A120T, 3849 + 10kbC --> T, 2789 + 5G --> A, 5T-12TG and the novel mutation D110E. In three patients no mutation was identified after denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of the majority of CFTR gene exons. Conclusion: The clinical phenotypes of CF children diagnosed by their symptoms at different ages were very mild. None of them presented with a severe lung disease. The majority of them did not seem to have been damaged by the delayed diagnosis. The combination of IRT assay plus genotype analysis (1998-1999) appears to be a more reliable method of detecting CF than IRT measurement alone or combined with only the delF508 mutation.
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No. Sentence Comment
40 Mutation Frequency (%) DelF508 54 N1303K 8 G542X 6.25 1717-1G ® A 2.50 R334W 1.75 2183AA ® G 1.50 R117H, L1077P, W1282X 1.25 D110E, R347P, E585X, 2789 ‡ 5G ® A 0.75 R352Q, R553X, R1066H, D1152H, R1158X, 1782delA, 1898 ‡ 1G ® A, 3659delC 0.50 G85E, R117L, G178R, D579G, H609R, Y1032C, V1153E, R1162X, 621 ‡ 1G ® T, 711 ‡ 1G ® T, 1845delAG o 1846delGA, 2143delT 0.25 Table2.Differencesinthethreestrategiesofneonatalscreening(audit1990-1999).
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 11883825:40:310
status: NEW[hide] Detection of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conduct... Hum Reprod. 2007 May;22(5):1285-91. Epub 2007 Feb 28. Ratbi I, Legendre M, Niel F, Martin J, Soufir JC, Izard V, Costes B, Costa C, Goossens M, Girodon E
Detection of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene rearrangements enriches the mutation spectrum in congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens and impacts on genetic counselling.
Hum Reprod. 2007 May;22(5):1285-91. Epub 2007 Feb 28., [PMID:17329263]
Abstract [show]
BACKGROUND: Mutations in the cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene have been widely detected in infertile men with congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens (CBAVD). Despite extensive analysis of the CFTR gene using varied screening methods, a number of cases remain unsolved and could be attributable to the presence of large gene rearrangements, as recently shown for CF patients. METHODS: We carried out a complete CFTR gene study in a group of 222 CBAVD patients with strict diagnosis criteria and without renal anomaly, and searched for rearrangements using a semi-quantitative assay in a subgroup of 61 patients. RESULTS: The overall mutation detection rate was 87.8%, and 82% of patients carried two mutations. Ten out of the 99 different mutations accounted for 74.6% of identified alleles. Four large rearrangements were found in patients who already carried a mild mutation: two known partial deletions (exons 17a to 18 and 22 to 23), a complete deletion and a new partial duplication (exons 11 to 13). The rearrangements accounted for 7% of the previously unknown alleles and 1% of all identified alleles. CONCLUSIONS: Screening for rearrangements should be part of comprehensive CFTR gene studies in CBAVD patients and may have impacts on genetic counselling for the patients and their families.
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No. Sentence Comment
93 1 Two CFTR mutations 15 0-15 0 [R117H] þ [(TG)13(T)5] 1 [R117H] þ [(TG)12(T)5] 1 [R117H] þ [(TG)11(T)5] 1 [R117H] þ [M952I] 1 [D1152H] þ [(TG)12(T)5] 2 [D1152H] þ [Y1032C] 1 [(TG)11(T)5;V562I] þ [L997F] 1 [(TG)11(T)5;V562I] þ [S977F] 1 [E1473X] þ [(TG)13(T)5] 1 [V232D] þ [(TG)12(T)5] 1 [R334W] þ [(TG)12(T)5] 1 [G622D] þ [(TG)12(T)5] 1 [3272-26A .
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 17329263:93:194
status: NEW[hide] Do common in silico tools predict the clinical con... Clin Genet. 2010 May;77(5):464-73. Epub 2009 Jan 6. Dorfman R, Nalpathamkalam T, Taylor C, Gonska T, Keenan K, Yuan XW, Corey M, Tsui LC, Zielenski J, Durie P
Do common in silico tools predict the clinical consequences of amino-acid substitutions in the CFTR gene?
Clin Genet. 2010 May;77(5):464-73. Epub 2009 Jan 6., [PMID:20059485]
Abstract [show]
Computational methods are used to predict the molecular consequences of amino-acid substitutions on the basis of evolutionary conservation or protein structure, but their utility in clinical diagnosis or prediction of disease outcome has not been well validated. We evaluated three popular computer programs, namely, PANTHER, SIFT and PolyPhen, by comparing the predicted clinical outcomes for a group of known CFTR missense mutations against the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF) and clinical manifestations in cohorts of subjects with CF-disease and CFTR-related disorders carrying these mutations. Owing to poor specificity, none of tools reliably distinguished between individual mutations that confer CF disease from mutations found in subjects with a CFTR-related disorder or no disease. Prediction scores for CFTR mutations derived from PANTHER showed a significant overall statistical correlation with the spectrum of disease severity associated with mutations in the CFTR gene. In contrast, PolyPhen- and SIFT-derived scores only showed significant differences between CF-causing and non-CF variants. Current computational methods are not recommended for establishing or excluding a CF diagnosis, notably as a newborn screening strategy or in patients with equivocal test results.
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No. Sentence Comment
64 Mutations in the CFTR gene grouped by clinical category Cystic fibrosis CFTR-related disease No disease T338I D614G L320V V920L L90S M470V H199R S1251N I203M G550R P111A I148T Q1291H R560K L1388Q L183I R170H I1027T S549R D443Y P499A L1414S T908N R668C S549N A455E E1401K Q151K G27E I1234L Y563N R347P C866R S1118C P1290S R75Q A559T V520F P841R M469V E1401G P67L G85E S50Y E1409K R933G G458V G178R Y1032C R248T I980K G85V V392G L973P L137H T351S R334W I444S V938G R792G R560T R555G L1339F D1305E P574H V1240G T1053I D58G G551D L1335P I918M F994C S945L L558S F1337V R810G D1152H G1247R P574S R766M D579G W1098R H949R F200I R352Q L1077P K1351E M244K L206W M1101K D1154G L375F N1303K R1066C E528D D110Y R347H R1070Q A800G P1021S S549K A1364V V392A damaging` (is supposed to affect protein function or structure) and 'probably damaging` (high confidence of affecting protein function or structure).
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 20059485:64:397
status: NEW[hide] Clinical outcomes in infants with cystic fibrosis ... Pediatr Pulmonol. 2011 Apr 29. doi: 10.1002/ppul.21475. Ren CL, Desai H, Platt M, Dixon M
Clinical outcomes in infants with cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) related metabolic syndrome.
Pediatr Pulmonol. 2011 Apr 29. doi: 10.1002/ppul.21475., 2011-04-29 [PMID:21538969]
Abstract [show]
An unavoidable outcome of cystic fibrosis newborn screening (CF NBS) programs is the detection of infants with an indeterminate diagnosis. The United States CF Foundation recently proposed the term cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator related metabolic syndrome (CRMS) to describe infants with elevated immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) on NBS who do not meet diagnostic criteria for CF. The objective of this study was to describe the clinical outcomes of infants with CRMS identified through an IRT/DNA algorithm. We reviewed the records of all infants with CRMS diagnosed at our CF Center from 2002 to 2010. We identified 12 infants, and compared them to 27 infants diagnosed with CF by NBS. Compared to CF patients, CRMS patients were more likely to be pancreatic sufficient as assessed by fecal elastase measurement (100% vs. 8%, P < 0.01). Their weight for age percentile was normal from birth. A positive oropharyngeal (OP) culture for Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa) was found in 25% of CRMS patients. One patient with the F508del/R117H/7T genotype was reassigned the diagnosis of CF after he had a positive OP culture for Pa, and his follow up sweat Cl at 1 year of life was 73 mmol/L. CF patients were more likely to receive oral antibiotics and be hospitalized for pulmonary symptoms. Our results indicate that CRMS patients can develop signs of CF disease, but have a milder clinical course than CF infants. Close initial monitoring of these patients is warranted. Pediatr. Pulmonol. (c) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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No. Sentence Comment
78 TABLE 3- Clinical Features and Outcomes of the CRMS Infants Patient number Gender Race/ ethnicity Mean age at 1st sweat (weeks) Mean sweat chloride (range) CFTR gene mutations identified Follow up time (months) Fecal elastase (mcg/gm stool) History of Pa infection History of hospitalization 1 Male Caucasian 4 46 (38-54) F508del/R117H/7T 36 303 Yes No 2 Male Caucasian 5 40 (40-43) F508del/R117H/7T 60 500 Yes No 3 Female Caucasian 3 29 (27-31) F508del/R117H/7T 60 488 No No 4 Male Caucasian 3 34 (33-38) F508del/none 26 383 No No 5 Male Caucasian 3 45 (40-50) F508del/none 72 424 No No 6 Female Caucasian 3 35 (32-38) F508del/none 9 454 No No 7 Male Caucasian 3 41 (36-46) F508del/none 39 462 No No 8 Female Caucasian 5 50 (46-52) F508del/none 72 440 No Yes 9 Male Caucasian 4 43 (41-45) F508del/Y1032C 14 401 No No 10 Male Caucasian 3 52 (50-54) G542X/none 21 500 No No 11 Female Caucasian 8 34 (30-38) R560T/none 9 433 No No 12 Female Hispanic 6 36 (32-40) R334W/R117H/7T 24 500 Yes No Mean sweat chloride levels represent the mean of all tests performed in the neonatal period.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 21538969:78:798
status: NEW79 TABLE 3- Clinical Features and Outcomes of the CRMS Infants Patient number Gender Race/ ethnicity Mean age at 1st sweat (weeks) Mean sweat chloride (range) CFTR gene mutations identified Follow up time (months) Fecal elastase (mcg/gm stool) History of Pa infection History of hospitalization 1 Male Caucasian 4 46 (38-54) F508del/R117H/7T 36 303 Yes No 2 Male Caucasian 5 40 (40-43) F508del/R117H/7T 60 500 Yes No 3 Female Caucasian 3 29 (27-31) F508del/R117H/7T 60 488 No No 4 Male Caucasian 3 34 (33-38) F508del/none 26 383 No No 5 Male Caucasian 3 45 (40-50) F508del/none 72 424 No No 6 Female Caucasian 3 35 (32-38) F508del/none 9 454 No No 7 Male Caucasian 3 41 (36-46) F508del/none 39 462 No No 8 Female Caucasian 5 50 (46-52) F508del/none 72 440 No Yes 9 Male Caucasian 4 43 (41-45) F508del/Y1032C 14 401 No No 10 Male Caucasian 3 52 (50-54) G542X/none 21 500 No No 11 Female Caucasian 8 34 (30-38) R560T/none 9 433 No No 12 Female Hispanic 6 36 (32-40) R334W/R117H/7T 24 500 Yes No Mean sweat chloride levels represent the mean of all tests performed in the neonatal period.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 21538969:79:798
status: NEW[hide] Borderline sweat test: Utility and limits of genet... Clin Biochem. 2009 May;42(7-8):611-6. Epub 2009 Jan 24. Seia M, Costantino L, Paracchini V, Porcaro L, Capasso P, Coviello D, Corbetta C, Torresani E, Magazzu D, Consalvo V, Monti A, Costantini D, Colombo C
Borderline sweat test: Utility and limits of genetic analysis for the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis.
Clin Biochem. 2009 May;42(7-8):611-6. Epub 2009 Jan 24., [PMID:19318035]
Abstract [show]
OBJECTIVE: The sweat test remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of Cystic Fibrosis (CF) even despite the availability of molecular analysis of Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator gene (CFTR). We investigated the relationship between CFTR mutation analysis and sweat chloride concentration in a cohort of subjects with borderline sweat test values, in order to identify misdiagnosis of CF. DESIGN AND METHODS: In the period between March 2006 and February 2008 we performed 773 sweat tests in individuals referred for suspect CF. Ninety-one subjects had chloride values in the border-line range. Clinicians required CFTR gene complete scanning on 66 of them. RESULTS: The mean value of sweat chloride in the DNA negative subjects was lower than in those with at least one CFTR mutation. Our data indicate that 39 mEq/l is the best sensitivity trade off for the sweat test with respect to genotype. CONCLUSIONS: To optimise diagnostic accuracy of reference intervals, it may be useful to modify from 30 to 39 mEq/l the threshold for sweat chloride electrolytes.
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No. Sentence Comment
59 In order to evaluate the relationship between the presence of CFTR mutation and sweat chloride concentration, we focused our attention on the 91 individuals (11.8%) in whom borderline sweat chloride values (31-59 mEq/l) were recorded (mean sweat electrolyte value was 40.0 mEq/l): 25 refused to be referred to the local Table 2 Demographic and clinical features of subjects with positive DNA analysis Patient Initials Gender Age at test years/ months Sweat chloride mEq/l Clinical indication DNA results IRT Right arm Left arm 1 CA M 49y5m 34 34 CBAVD G542X/5T-TG12 ND 2 SA M 45y2m 45 43 Pancreatitis F508del/R117H-7T ND 3 PD F 43y7m 33 38 Recurrent bronchitis F508del/5T-TG12 ND 4 CA M 36y1m 31 29 CBAVD R117H-7T/R117C-7T ND 5 SC M 36y1m 33 40 Pneumonia F508del/D1152H ND 6 MG M 25Y5m 41 45 CBAVD Q552X/D1152H NEG 7 SG M 18y5m 49 54 Pancreatitis 4016insT/dupl.prom.-3 ND 8 LS F 10y4m 41 38 Pancreatitis D1152H/L997F NEG 9 CM M 8y3m 30 31 Pneumonia F1052V/A120T NEG 10 PT M 7y3m 41 39 Positive screening F508del/Y1032C POS 11 ME F 7y1m 44 44 Positive screening 2789+5GNA/5T-TG12 POS 12 PM F 6y4m 35 36 Positive screening 2183AANG/5T-TG12 POS 13 BM F 6y3m 36 39 Positive screening F508del/5T-TG12 POS 14 CD M 5y8m 40 41 Chronic bronchitis 5T-TG12/5T-TG12 NEG 15 CG F 4y5m 33 37 Recurrent bronchitis R553X/L997F POS 16 CS F 3y8m 53 58 Family history G542X/D614G POS 17 VA M 4y2m 49 43 Pneumonia E831X/5T-TG12 ND 18 SC M 3y4m 39 39 Positive screening R352Q/G213E POS 19 CC F 2y3m 31 31 Positive screening F508del/5T-TG12 POS 20 CA F 2y5m 51 52 Recurrent bronchitis E831X/5T-TG12 ND 21 MR F 3y+7m 29 31 Family history G542X/5T-TG12 POS 22 CM F 2y3m 60 58 Pneumonia T338I/L997F POS 23 LM F 2y1m 50 52 Positive screening F508del/E1473X POS 24 CGE F 0y8m 46 47 Positive screening E92K/5T-TG13 POS 25 NF M 0y7m 32 30 Positive screening F508del/P5L POS 26 RG M 0y7m 45 40 Positive screening N1303K/P5L POS 27 PE M 47y4m 60 58 Nasal polyposis R1066H/UN ND 28 LS M 39y9m 39 38 Azoospermy N1303K/UN ND 29 TM M 38y4m 40 45 Azoospermy N1303K/UN ND 30 DF M 34y2m 52 58 Bronchiectasis 3849+10 kbCNT/UN ND 31 TV F 30y5m 35 34 Recurrent bronchitis L997F/UN ND 32 FA F 18y7m 53 49 Family history Del es.2/UN NEG 33 DG M 17y8m 43 47 Recurrent bronchitis 5T-TG12/UN NEG 34 LN F 13y7m 54 53 Nasal poliposis, malnutrition R74W-V855I/UN NEG 35 FKT M 15y4m 54 53 Chronic bronchitis R352Q/UN NEG 36 BM M 10y9m 48 51 Chronic bronchitis T1263I/UN NEG 37 SV F 11y1m 60 58 Chronic bronchitis R347H/UN NEG 38 CV F 10y10m 38 39 Recurrent bronchitis 5T-TG12/UN NEG 39 BF F 9y10m 37 38 Chronic bronchitis L997F/UN NEG 40 CA M 8y2m 33 32 Pneumonia F508del/UN NEG 41 RX F 8y7m 29 31 Chronic bronchitis V920L/UN NEG 42 MG F 4y3m 51 51 Positive screening F508del/UN POS Sweat chloride concentration and mutations/variants detected are also reported.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 19318035:59:1012
status: NEW57 In order to evaluate the relationship between the presence of CFTR mutation and sweat chloride concentration, we focused our attention on the 91 individuals (11.8%) in whom borderline sweat chloride values (31-59 mEq/l) were recorded (mean sweat electrolyte value was 40.0 mEq/l): 25 refused to be referred to the local Table 2 Demographic and clinical features of subjects with positive DNA analysis Patient Initials Gender Age at test years/ months Sweat chloride mEq/l Clinical indication DNA results IRT Right arm Left arm 1 CA M 49y5m 34 34 CBAVD G542X/5T-TG12 ND 2 SA M 45y2m 45 43 Pancreatitis F508del/R117H-7T ND 3 PD F 43y7m 33 38 Recurrent bronchitis F508del/5T-TG12 ND 4 CA M 36y1m 31 29 CBAVD R117H-7T/R117C-7T ND 5 SC M 36y1m 33 40 Pneumonia F508del/D1152H ND 6 MG M 25Y5m 41 45 CBAVD Q552X/D1152H NEG 7 SG M 18y5m 49 54 Pancreatitis 4016insT/dupl.prom.-3 ND 8 LS F 10y4m 41 38 Pancreatitis D1152H/L997F NEG 9 CM M 8y3m 30 31 Pneumonia F1052V/A120T NEG 10 PT M 7y3m 41 39 Positive screening F508del/Y1032C POS 11 ME F 7y1m 44 44 Positive screening 2789+5GNA/5T-TG12 POS 12 PM F 6y4m 35 36 Positive screening 2183AANG/5T-TG12 POS 13 BM F 6y3m 36 39 Positive screening F508del/5T-TG12 POS 14 CD M 5y8m 40 41 Chronic bronchitis 5T-TG12/5T-TG12 NEG 15 CG F 4y5m 33 37 Recurrent bronchitis R553X/L997F POS 16 CS F 3y8m 53 58 Family history G542X/D614G POS 17 VA M 4y2m 49 43 Pneumonia E831X/5T-TG12 ND 18 SC M 3y4m 39 39 Positive screening R352Q/G213E POS 19 CC F 2y3m 31 31 Positive screening F508del/5T-TG12 POS 20 CA F 2y5m 51 52 Recurrent bronchitis E831X/5T-TG12 ND 21 MR F 3y+7m 29 31 Family history G542X/5T-TG12 POS 22 CM F 2y3m 60 58 Pneumonia T338I/L997F POS 23 LM F 2y1m 50 52 Positive screening F508del/E1473X POS 24 CGE F 0y8m 46 47 Positive screening E92K/5T-TG13 POS 25 NF M 0y7m 32 30 Positive screening F508del/P5L POS 26 RG M 0y7m 45 40 Positive screening N1303K/P5L POS 27 PE M 47y4m 60 58 Nasal polyposis R1066H/UN ND 28 LS M 39y9m 39 38 Azoospermy N1303K/UN ND 29 TM M 38y4m 40 45 Azoospermy N1303K/UN ND 30 DF M 34y2m 52 58 Bronchiectasis 3849+10 kbCNT/UN ND 31 TV F 30y5m 35 34 Recurrent bronchitis L997F/UN ND 32 FA F 18y7m 53 49 Family history Del es.2/UN NEG 33 DG M 17y8m 43 47 Recurrent bronchitis 5T-TG12/UN NEG 34 LN F 13y7m 54 53 Nasal poliposis, malnutrition R74W-V855I/UN NEG 35 FKT M 15y4m 54 53 Chronic bronchitis R352Q/UN NEG 36 BM M 10y9m 48 51 Chronic bronchitis T1263I/UN NEG 37 SV F 11y1m 60 58 Chronic bronchitis R347H/UN NEG 38 CV F 10y10m 38 39 Recurrent bronchitis 5T-TG12/UN NEG 39 BF F 9y10m 37 38 Chronic bronchitis L997F/UN NEG 40 CA M 8y2m 33 32 Pneumonia F508del/UN NEG 41 RX F 8y7m 29 31 Chronic bronchitis V920L/UN NEG 42 MG F 4y3m 51 51 Positive screening F508del/UN POS Sweat chloride concentration and mutations/variants detected are also reported.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 19318035:57:1012
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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No. Sentence Comment
88 This study L997F G→C at 3123 exon 17a 1 A2 Fanen et al. (1992) Y1032C A→G at 3227 exon 17a 1 B3 This study 3272-26 A→G A→G at 3272-26 intron 17a 2 D3 Fanen et al. (1992) D1152H G→C at 3586 exon 18 3 C2, A2 Highsmith et al. (pers. comm.) V1153E T→A at 3590 exon 18 1 B3 This study 3659delC deletion of C at 3659 exon 19 1 C2 Kerem et al. (1990) W1282X G→A at 3978 exon 20 1 D3 Vidaud et al. (1991) N1303K C→G at 4041 exon 21 1 B1 Osborne et al. (1991) K1351E A→G at 4183 exon 22 1 A2 This study D1377H G→C at 4261 exon 22 1 C1 Costes et al. (1995) L1388Q T→A at 4295 exon 23 1 n.p.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 9272157:88:70
status: NEW94 Mutation Y1032C is an amino-acid substitution encoded by exon 17a and is predicted to reside within the tenth transmembrane helix of CFTR; it was found in a German CBAVD patient heterozygous for Y1032C and for ∆F508.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 9272157:94:9
status: NEWX
ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 9272157:94:195
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.Tyr1032Cys 9272157:137:1171
status: NEW144 Lung function tests indicated initial pulmonary deterioration in a few cases (FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, given as percent predicted) Subject Age Genotype Height Weight Sweat C1- Symptoms (years) (cm) (kg) (mM) 1 33 ∆F508/R117H 172 75 46 Dyspnoe 2 37 ∆F508/R117H 178 83 31 Nasal polyposis 3 31 ∆F508/R117H 181 91 n.d. Nasal polyposis 4 32 R117H/unknown 164 70 33 Recurrent infections 5 33 ∆F508/E56K 193 100 85 Sinusitis, recurrent bronchitis 6 31 ∆F508/M265R 192 112 59 Recurrent infections, pancreatitis 7 33 ∆F508/R334W 182 78 n.d. Recurrent infections, pneumonia 8 28 ∆F508/R347H n.d. n.d. n.d. Recurrent infections 9 32 ∆F508/F508C 192 98 32 Pneumonia 10 34 ∆F508/Y1032C n.d. n.d. n.d. Recurrent bronchitis 11 33 ∆F508/3272-26 A→G 172 82 125 Recurrent infections, maldigestion, FEVI 73% 12 28 ∆F508/unknown 185 95 n.d.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 9272157:144:742
status: NEW[hide] A Genotypic-Oriented View of CFTR Genetics Highlig... Mol Med. 2015 Apr 21;21:257-75. doi: 10.2119/molmed.2014.00229. Lucarelli M, Bruno SM, Pierandrei S, Ferraguti G, Stamato A, Narzi F, Amato A, Cimino G, Bertasi S, Quattrucci S, Strom R
A Genotypic-Oriented View of CFTR Genetics Highlights Specific Mutational Patterns Underlying Clinical Macrocategories of Cystic Fibrosis.
Mol Med. 2015 Apr 21;21:257-75. doi: 10.2119/molmed.2014.00229., [PMID:25910067]
Abstract [show]
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a monogenic disease caused by mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene. The genotype-phenotype relationship in this disease is still unclear, and diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic challenges persist. We enrolled 610 patients with different forms of CF and studied them from a clinical, biochemical, microbiological and genetic point of view. Overall, there were 125 different mutated alleles (11 with novel mutations and 10 with complex mutations) and 225 genotypes. A strong correlation between mutational patterns at the genotypic level and phenotypic macrocategories emerged. This specificity appears to largely depend on rare and individual mutations, as well as on the varying prevalence of common alleles in different clinical macrocategories. However, 19 genotypes appeared to underlie different clinical forms of the disease. The dissection of the pathway from the CFTR mutated genotype to the clinical phenotype allowed to identify at least two components of the variability usually found in the genotype-phenotype relationship. One component seems to depend on the genetic variation of CFTR, the other component on the cumulative effect of variations in other genes and cellular pathways independent from CFTR. The experimental dissection of the overall biological CFTR pathway appears to be a powerful approach for a better comprehension of the genotype-phenotype relationship. However, a change from an allele-oriented to a genotypic-oriented view of CFTR genetics is mandatory, as well as a better assessment of sources of variability within the CFTR pathway.
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385 [Gly576Ala;Arg668Cys] D579G c.1736A>G CF-PS varying clinical consequence p.Asp579Gly E585X c.1753G>T CF-PI CF-causing p.Glu585* H609L c.1826A>T CFTR-RD nd p.His609Leu A613T c.1837G>A CF-PS nd p.Ala613Thr D614G c.1841A>G CF-PS unknown significance p.Asp614Gly 2143delT c.2012delT CF-PS CF-causing p.Leu671* 2183AA>G c.2051_2052delAAinsG CF-PI,CF-PS CF-causing p.Lys684SerfsX38 2184insA c.2052_2053insA CF-PI CF-causing p.Gln685ThrfsX4 R709X c.2125C>T CF-PI CF-causing p.Arg709* L732X c.2195T>G CF-PI CF-causing p.Leu732* R764X c.2290C>T CF-PI CF-causing p.Arg764* Q779X c.2335C>T uncertain: CF-PI and/or CF-PS nd p.Gln779* E831X c.2491G>T CF-PS CF-causing p.Glu831* Y849X c.2547C>A CF-PI CF-causing p.Tyr849* ex14b-17bdel c.2620-674_3367+198del9858 CF-PI nd 2789+5G>A c.2657+5G>A CF-PI,CF-PS CF-causing 2790-2A>G c.2658-2A>G CF-PS nd S912L c.2735C>T uncertain: found only with an unknown allele in trans nd p.Ser912Leu S945L c.2834C>T CF-PS CF-causing p.Ser945Leu S977F c.2930C>T CFTR-RD varying clinical consequence p.Ser977Phe L997F c.2991G>C CF-PS,CFTR-RD,CBAVD non CF-causing p.Leu997Phe ex17a-18del c.2988+1173_3468+2111del8600 CF-PI nd P1013L c.3038C>T CFTR-RD nd p.Pro1013Leu Y1032C c.3095A>G CFTR-RD nd p.Tyr1032Cys 3272-26A>G c.3140-26A>G CF-PS CF-causing L1065P c.3194T>C CF-PI,CF-PS CF-causing p.Leu1065Pro L1065R c.3194T>G uncertain: CF-PI and/or CF-PS nd p.Leu1065Arg R1066C c.3196C>T CF-PI CF-causing p.Arg1066Cys R1066H c.3197G>A CF-PI CF-causing p.Arg1066His G1069R c.3205G>A uncertain: found only with an unknown allele in trans varying clinical consequence p.Gly1069Arg Continued on next page of 0.021).
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ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 25910067:385:1182
status: NEWX
ABCC7 p.Tyr1032Cys 25910067:385:1212
status: NEW