ABCC7 p.Tyr852Ala
Predicted by SNAP2: | A: D (80%), C: D (75%), D: D (91%), E: D (91%), F: N (57%), G: D (85%), H: D (85%), I: D (80%), K: D (85%), L: D (75%), M: D (85%), N: D (80%), P: D (95%), Q: D (85%), R: D (91%), S: D (85%), T: D (85%), V: D (80%), W: D (85%), |
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] Heterogenous spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in In... Hum Reprod. 2009 May;24(5):1229-36. Epub 2009 Jan 30. Sharma N, Acharya N, Singh SK, Singh M, Sharma U, Prasad R
Heterogenous spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in Indian patients with congenital absence of vas deferens.
Hum Reprod. 2009 May;24(5):1229-36. Epub 2009 Jan 30., [PMID:19181743]
Abstract [show]
BACKGROUND: Mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene can cause congenital bilateral absence of vas deferens. Yet, the spectrum and frequency of CFTR mutations in Indian males with congenital absence of vas deferens (CAVD) is unknown. METHODS: We investigated 50 Indian males, diagnosed with unilateral or bilateral absence of vas deferens at the PGIMER, Chandigarh, for the presence of the most common CFTR gene mutations as well as unknown mutations by single-strand conformation polymorphism followed by sequence analysis. RESULTS: This study led to the identification of 12 CFTR gene mutations on 48% of 100 Indian CAVD chromosomes. CFTR mutations were identified on both alleles in 11 patients (22%) and on one allele in 26 patients (52%). Novel CFTR mutations identified were L69H, F87I, G126S, F157C, E543A, Y852F and D1270E. The T5 allele (25%) and F508del (11%) were the most common mutations identified. The most common intragenic marker haplotype for F508del was 2111 (GATT, TUB9, M470V and T854T). No mutations could be detected in 13 CAVD patients (26%), including 4 with renal malformations. CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms the molecular heterogeneity of CFTR mutations in CAVD. Although the mutation detection rate is indeed lower in Indian CAVD patients, 74% of the patients tested had at least one CFTR mutation. CAVD alleles with no mutations suggest that other changes may be located at the non-screened sites that require extensive search by direct sequencing. Furthermore, the novel CFTR mutations identified require functional studies in a cell-based system.
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No. Sentence Comment
132 In CBAVD patients, a high frequency of compound heterozygosity with severe/mild or mild/mild mutations has been reported Figure 1 Multiple alignments of CFTR amino acid sequences from different species (human, rhesus monkey, bovine, sheep, pig and mouse) and seven novel substitution mutations (L69H, F87I, G126S, F157C, E543A, Y852A and D1270E) identified in Indian CAVD patients.
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ABCC7 p.Tyr852Ala 19181743:132:328
status: NEW