Open Access

Intron 2 Splice Mutation at CYP21 Gene in Patients with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia in the Republic of Macedonia

 and   
Jan 20, 2011

Cite
Download Cover

Congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) is an autosomal recessive disorder. In 90-95% of cases it results from mutations in the gene for 21-hydroxylase (CYP21, also termed CYP21A2 and P450c21). The IVS-II-656 (C/A>G) mutation leaves ~2.0% enzyme activity, and comprises 25% of the classic CYP21 deficiency alleles and 51% of alleles in the salt-wasting form.

We performed direct molecular diagnosis of the IVS-II mutation in 41 Macedonian patients with different clinical forms of CAH and 55 of their healthy parents and siblings from 37 unrelated families, using the differential polymerase chain reaction/amplification created restriction site method (PCR/ACRS). The IVS-II mutation was detected in 41.5% patients (29.3% were homozygotes and 12.2% were heterozygotes). All homozygotes had a severe classical CAH phenotype (of which 91.7% were salt-wasting and 8.3% were simple virilizing). Three of the heterozygotes had a salt-wasting (SW) phenotype and were compound heterozygotes. The IVS-II mutation was also found in 30.9% of the family members (18.2% were homozygous and 12.7% were heterozygous) and none had any clinical manifestation. The frequency of the IVS-II mutation (41.5%) in these subjects was similar to that reported elsewhere.

Language:
English
Publication timeframe:
2 times per year
Journal Subjects:
Medicine, Basic Medical Science, Basic Medical Science, other