ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser
ClinVar: |
c.494T>C
,
p.Leu165Ser
?
, not provided
|
CF databases: |
c.494T>C
,
p.Leu165Ser
(CFTR1)
?
, The patient is 20 years old, pancreatic insufficient, and the second chromosome carries the [delta]F508.
|
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: D (71%), C: D (59%), D: D (91%), E: D (85%), F: D (75%), G: D (91%), H: D (80%), I: D (53%), K: D (85%), M: N (53%), N: D (85%), P: D (91%), Q: D (71%), R: D (85%), S: D (85%), T: D (80%), V: D (53%), W: D (85%), Y: D (80%), |
Predicted by PROVEAN: | A: D, C: D, D: D, E: D, F: D, G: D, H: D, I: N, K: D, M: N, N: D, P: D, Q: D, R: D, S: D, T: D, V: D, W: D, Y: D, |
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[hide] Mutations of the cystic fibrosis gene and intermed... Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Mar 15;165(6):757-61. Lebecque P, Leal T, De Boeck C, Jaspers M, Cuppens H, Cassiman JJ
Mutations of the cystic fibrosis gene and intermediate sweat chloride levels in children.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002 Mar 15;165(6):757-61., 2002-03-15 [PMID:11897640]
Abstract [show]
The incidence of mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene in children with intermediate sweat chloride levels is unknown. The results of 2,349 sweat tests performed at two Belgian university hospitals were reviewed. Intermediate chloride concentrations were observed in 98 subjects (4.2%), 68 being younger than 18 years of age. Forty-three children could be traced and their parents agreed to take part in the study. Exhaustive analysis of the CFTR gene disclosed a total of 24 putative mutations (27.9%). Three subjects were found to carry only one CFTR mutation, whereas 10 harbored one mutation on both CFTR genes. These 10 children were investigated in detail. At the time of writing, the mean age (+/-SD) of this group is 8.9 years (+/-4.2 years). Nine children are pancreatic sufficient. Three have been asymptomatic for more than two years, whereas the others display, to different degrees, clinical features suggestive of CF. The sweat chloride concentration is slightly higher in this group (39.4 +/- 5.4 mM) than in subjects without CFTR mutation (35.2 +/- 4.4 mM, p < 0.05). The nasal potential difference was abnormal in five of the nine subjects tested. In this study, 23% of children displaying intermediate sweat chloride levels were found to carry a putative mutation on both CFTR genes.
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No. Sentence Comment
47 Three subjects were found to be heterozygotes, carriers of a single mutation (⌬F508, L165S, and G576A).
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 11897640:47:92
status: NEW[hide] Mutation spectrum in Jewish cystic fibrosis patien... Am J Med Genet A. 2005 Jul 30;136(3):246-8. Quint A, Lerer I, Sagi M, Abeliovich D
Mutation spectrum in Jewish cystic fibrosis patients in Israel: implication to carrier screening.
Am J Med Genet A. 2005 Jul 30;136(3):246-8., 2005-07-30 [PMID:15948195]
Abstract [show]
We have tested 144 unrelated Jewish patients suffering from the classical form of cystic fibrosis. The patients were screened for a panel of 12 mutations including the six Ashkenazi founder mutations (DeltaF508, W1282X, N1303K, G542X, 3849 + 10 kb C-->T, 1717-1G > A) and six mutations that were found in non-Ashkenazi Jewish patients (S549R (T-->G), G85E, 405 + 1G-->A, W1089X, Y1092, and D1152H). Patients of Georgian origin were tested also for the Q359K/T360K mutation. In addition, all the patients were tested for the IVS-8 variant (9T/7T/5T). Of all the cystic fibrosis (CF)-bearing chromosomes, 94% (264/281) were accounted for by one of the known mutations, and none of the patients had the 5T allele of the IVS-8 variant. Single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of the coding sequence of the CFTR gene followed by sequencing showed eight mutations on ten CF chromosomes, leaving seven chromosomes (2.5%) with unknown mutations. We identified three mutations in two or more CF chromosomes, 2571 + 1insT in Jews from Iraq, 3121-1G > A in patients from Kurdistan and I1234V in Yemenite Jewish patients. The other five mutations appeared on a single allele and are considered "private mutations." In this study we have identified 99% of CF alleles in Ashkenazi Jewish patients, 91% in Jews of North African origin and 75% in Jewish patients from Iraq. The significance of these findings to the population screening in Israel is discussed.
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No. Sentence Comment
37 In this group we revealed two additional mutations L165S and A455E, each was identified on a single chromosome and one mutation remained unidentified. The relative frequencies of the Ashkenazi founder mutations in Ashkenazi patients were W1282X (43%), DF508 (33%), G542X (10%), 3849 þ 10 kb C!T (5%), N1303K (5%), and 1717 (1%).
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 15948195:37:51
status: NEW58 Mutations in the CF Bearing Alleles in the Jewish Patients According to the Ethnic Origin Country of origin Ashkenazi Morocco Tunisia Balkan Iraq Iran/ Kurdistan Georgia Yemen Total Number of alleles (%) 193 (69.0) 34 (12.1) 12 (4.3) 21 (7.5) 8 (2.8) 3 (0.7) 8 (2.8) 2 (0.7) 281 W1282X (%) 83 (42.8) 1 (8.3) 4 (19.0) 88 (31.3) DF508 (%) 65 (33.5) 24 (70.6) 3 (25.0) 7 (33.3) 1 100 (35.6) N1303K (%) 10 (5.2) 10 (3.6) G542X (%) 19 (10.3) 4 (19.0) 24 (8.5) 3849-10 kbC!T (%) 10 (5.1) 1 (2.9) 2 (9.5) 13 (4.6) 1717-1G!A (%) 2 (1.0) 2 (0.7) D1152H (%) 1 (0.5) 1 (0.4) S549R (T!G) (%) 4 (11.8) 4 (1.4) G85E (%) 2 (9.5) 2 (0.7) 405 þ 1G!A (%) 8 (66.7) 8 (2.8) Y1092X (%) 3 (37.5) 3 (1.1) W1089X (%) 2 (9.5) 2 (0.7) Q359K/T360K (%) 8 (100) 8 (2.8) I1234V (%) 2 (100) 2 (0.7) 2751 þ 1insT (%) 2 (25.0) 2 (0.7) 3121-1G > A (%) 1 1 (0.4) M952I (%) 1 (12.5) 1 (0.4) L165S (%) 1 (0.5) 1 (0.4) A455E (%) 1 (0.5) 1 (0.4) L997F (%) 1 (2.9) 1 (0.4) G1244E (%) 1 (2.9) 1 (0.4) Unkown (%) 1 (0.5) 3 (8.8) 2 (25.0) 1 7 (2.5) Mutation Spectrum in Jewish CF Patients [Wahab, 2003].
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 15948195:58:865
status: NEW[hide] Phenotypic characterisation of patients with inter... Thorax. 2009 Aug;64(8):683-91. Epub 2009 Mar 23. Goubau C, Wilschanski M, Skalicka V, Lebecque P, Southern KW, Sermet I, Munck A, Derichs N, Middleton PG, Hjelte L, Padoan R, Vasar M, De Boeck K
Phenotypic characterisation of patients with intermediate sweat chloride values: towards validation of the European diagnostic algorithm for cystic fibrosis.
Thorax. 2009 Aug;64(8):683-91. Epub 2009 Mar 23., [PMID:19318346]
Abstract [show]
BACKGROUND: In patients with symptoms suggestive of cystic fibrosis (CF) and intermediate sweat chloride values (30-60 mmol/l), extensive CFTR gene mutation analysis and nasal potential difference (NPD) measurement are used as additional diagnostic tests and a positive result in either test provides evidence of CFTR dysfunction. To define the phenotype of such patients and confirm the validity of grouping them, patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom either additional CF diagnostic test was abnormal were compared with subjects in whom this was not the case and patients with classic CF. METHODS: The phenotypic features of four groups were compared: 59 patients with CFTR dysfunction, 46 with an intermediate sweat chloride concentration but no evidence of CFTR dysfunction (CF unlikely), 103 patients with CF and pancreatic sufficiency (CF-PS) and 62 with CF and pancreatic insufficiency (CF-PI). RESULTS: The CFTR dysfunction group had more lower respiratory tract infections (p = 0.01), more isolation of CF pathogens (p<0.001) and clubbing (p = 0.001) than the CF unlikely group, but less frequent respiratory tract infections with CF pathogens than the CF-PS group (p = 0.05). Patients in the CF-PS group had a milder phenotype than those with PI. Many features showed stepwise changes through the patient groups. CONCLUSION: Patients with intermediate sweat chloride values and two CFTR mutations or an abnormal NPD measurement have a CF-like phenotype compatible with CFTR dysfunction and, as a group, differ phenotypically from patients with intermediate sweat chloride values in whom further CF diagnostic tests are normal as well as from CF-PS and CF-PI patients.
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No. Sentence Comment
60 Table 2 CFTR mutations in the patient subgroups CF-PS CFTR dysfunction CF unlikely Genotype Subjects (n) Genotype Subjects (n) Genotype Subjects (n) F508del*/Not found 12 F508del*/3849+10 kb(C.T){ 11 Not found/Not found 39 Not found/Not found 10 F508del*/R117H{ 7 F508del*/Not found 4 F508del*/3849+10 kb(C.T){ 7 F508del*/Not found 7 IVS8-5T{/Not found 1 F508del*/R347P{ 5 Not found/Not found 5 S1235E/E528E 1 F508del*/R117H{ 4 F508del*/D1152H{ 4 No mutation analysis 1 F508del*/2789+5G.A{ 4 F508del*/IVS8-5T{ 4 Total 46 F508del*/S945L* 3 F508del*/S945L* 2 2789+5G.A{/Not found 3 W1282X*/IVS8-5T{ 2 F508del*/3272-26 A.G{ 2 F508del*/R1070W{ 1 F508del*/A455E{ 2 F508del*/L159S 1 F508del*/711+5G.A 2 F508del*/T1246I 1 F508del*/2789+5G.A 2 F508del*/L165S 1 G542X*/R334W{ 2 W1282X*/D1152H{ 1 F508del*/R334W{ 2 R1162X*/D1152H{ 1 R347P{/Not found 2 R347Hu/D1152H{ 1 F508del*/2116delCTAA 1 R553X*/R117H{ 1 F508del*/IVS8-5T{ 1 3659delC*/R117H{ 1 F508del*/D1152H{ 1 3849+10kb(C.T){/G551R 1 F508del*/711+3A.G 1 R1162X*/3849+10 kb(C.T){ 1 F508del*/L206W{ 1 2789+5G.A{/Not found 1 F508del*/I336K{ 1 G542X*/T854A 1 F508del*/G970D 1 R553X*/Q1463H 1 F508del*/L159S 1 S1235R/R668C 1 F508del*/R751L 1 2789+5G.A{/S977F 1 F508del*/E656X 1 No mutation analysis 1 F508del*/4015delA 1 Total 59 F508del*/Y913S 1 F508del*/L165S 1 F508del*/2143delT 1 G551D*/I336K{ 1 G551D*/3272-26A.G{ 1 G551D*/711+3A.G 1 R553X*/4005+2T.C 1 R553X*/E92K{ 1 G542X*/L206W{ 1 W1282X*/I336K 1 R1162X*/3849+10 kb(C.T){ 1 R1162X*/2789+5G.A{ 1 574delA*/3141del9 1 9890X/I105N 1 R334W{/R1070Q{ 1 3272-26A.G{/4218insT 1 3272-26A.G{/L165S 1 711+3A.G/G1244E 1 R352Q/1812-1G.A 1 F1052V/IVS8-5T{ 1 R74W/D1270N 1 1898-3G.A/1898-3G.A 1 1717-1G.A*/R334W{ 1 3659delC*/Not found 1 394delTT/Not found 1 R1162X*/Not found 1 R553X*/Not found 1 R117H{/Not found 1 G85E*/Not found 1 3849+10k(C.T){/Not found 1 Total 103 *Mutation class I, II or III.
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 19318346:60:745
status: NEWX
ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 19318346:60:1297
status: NEWX
ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 19318346:60:1580
status: NEW[hide] Spectrum of CFTR mutations in cystic fibrosis and ... Hum Mutat. 2000;16(2):143-56. Claustres M, Guittard C, Bozon D, Chevalier F, Verlingue C, Ferec C, Girodon E, Cazeneuve C, Bienvenu T, Lalau G, Dumur V, Feldmann D, Bieth E, Blayau M, Clavel C, Creveaux I, Malinge MC, Monnier N, Malzac P, Mittre H, Chomel JC, Bonnefont JP, Iron A, Chery M, Georges MD
Spectrum of CFTR mutations in cystic fibrosis and in congenital absence of the vas deferens in France.
Hum Mutat. 2000;16(2):143-56., [PMID:10923036]
Abstract [show]
We have collated the results of cystic fibrosis (CF) mutation analysis conducted in 19 laboratories in France. We have analyzed 7, 420 CF alleles, demonstrating a total of 310 different mutations including 24 not reported previously, accounting for 93.56% of CF genes. The most common were F508del (67.18%; range 61-80), G542X (2.86%; range 1-6.7%), N1303K (2.10%; range 0.75-4.6%), and 1717-1G>A (1.31%; range 0-2.8%). Only 11 mutations had relative frequencies >0. 4%, 140 mutations were found on a small number of CF alleles (from 29 to two), and 154 were unique. These data show a clear geographical and/or ethnic variation in the distribution of the most common CF mutations. This spectrum of CF mutations, the largest ever reported in one country, has generated 481 different genotypes. We also investigated a cohort of 800 French men with congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens (CBAVD) and identified a total of 137 different CFTR mutations. Screening for the most common CF defects in addition to assessment for IVS8-5T allowed us to detect two mutations in 47.63% and one in 24.63% of CBAVD patients. In a subset of 327 CBAVD men who were more extensively investigated through the scanning of coding/flanking sequences, 516 of 654 (78. 90%) alleles were identified, with 15.90% and 70.95% of patients carrying one or two mutations, respectively, and only 13.15% without any detectable CFTR abnormality. The distribution of genotypes, classified according to the expected effect of their mutations on CFTR protein, clearly differed between both populations. CF patients had two severe mutations (87.77%) or one severe and one mild/variable mutation (11.33%), whereas CBAVD men had either a severe and a mild/variable (87.89%) or two mild/variable (11.57%) mutations.
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No. Sentence Comment
106 e M1V, R75X, L165S, F311L, R560K, 1898+1G>C, 1949del84, 2113delA, 2184delA, R792X, W846X2, 3121-1G>A, H1054D, 3737delA, D1270N+R74W.
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 10923036:106:13
status: NEW[hide] Human epithelial cystic fibrosis transmembrane con... Biophys J. 1996 Dec;71(6):3148-56. Xie J, Drumm ML, Zhao J, Ma J, Davis PB
Human epithelial cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator without exon 5 maintains partial chloride channel function in intracellular membranes.
Biophys J. 1996 Dec;71(6):3148-56., [PMID:8968585]
Abstract [show]
The cardiac isoform of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is a splice variant of the epithelial CFTR, with lacks 30 amino acids encoded by exon 5 in the first intracellular loop. For examination of the role of exon 5 in CFTR channel function, a CFTR deletion mutant, in which exon 5 was removed from the human epithelial CFTR, was constructed. The wild type and delta exon5 CFTR were expressed in a human embryonic kidney cell line (293 HEK). Fully mature glycosylated CFTR (approximately 170 kDa) was immunoprecipitated from cells transfected with wild type CFTR cDNA, whereas cells transfected with delta exon5 CFTR express only a core-glycosylated from (approximately 140 kDa). The Western blot test performed on subcellular membrane fractions showed that delta exon5 CFTR was located in the intracellular membranes. Neither incubation at lower temperature (26 degrees C) nor stimulation of 293 HEK cells with forskolin or CPT-cAMP caused improvement in glycosylation and processing of delta exon5 CFTR proteins, indicating that the human epithelial CFTR lacking exon5 did not process properly in 293 HEK cells. On incorporation of intracellular membrane vesicles containing the delta exon5 CFTR proteins into the lipid bilayer membrane, functional phosphorylation- and ATP-dependent chloride channels were identified. CFTR channels with an 8-pS full-conductance state were observed in 14% of the experiments. The channel had an average open probability (Po) of 0.098 +/- 0.022, significantly less than that of the wild type CFTR (Po = 0.318 +/- 0.028). More frequently, the delta exon5 CFTR formed chloride channels with lower conductance states of approximately 2-3 and approximately 4-6 pS. These subconductance states were also observed with wild type CFTR but to a much lesser extent. Average Po for the 2-3-pS subconductance state, estimated from the area under the curve on an amplitude histogram, was 0.461 +/- 0.194 for delta exon5 CFTR and 0.332 +/- 0.142 for wild type (p = 0.073). The data obtained indicate that deleting 30 amino acids from the first intracellular loop of CFTR affects both processing and function of the CFTR chloride channel.
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No. Sentence Comment
204 The facts that a splice mutation that deletes exon 5 was found to be a cystic fibrosis disease-causing mutant and that there is an array of cystic fibrosis mutations in the region encoded by exon 5 (L165S, K166E, R170C, 1175V, G178R, D192N, D192G, E193K; Fonknechten et al., 1992; Romey et al., 1994; Zielenski et al., 1991; Audrezet et al., 1994; Mercier et al., 1995; Cystic Fibrosis Mutation Data Base) suggest that exon 5 is important for the structure, function, or both of the CFTR chloride channel.
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 8968585:204:199
status: NEW205 The facts that a splice mutation that deletes exon 5 was found to be a cystic fibrosis disease-causing mutant and that there is an array of cystic fibrosis mutations in the region encoded by exon 5 (L165S, K166E, R170C, 1175V, G178R, D192N, D192G, E193K; Fonknechten et al., 1992; Romey et al., 1994; Zielenski et al., 1991; Audrezet et al., 1994; Mercier et al., 1995; Cystic Fibrosis Mutation Data Base) suggest that exon 5 is important for the structure, function, or both of the CFTR chloride channel.
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ABCC7 p.Leu165Ser 8968585:205:199
status: NEW