Human Propionyl-CoA Carboxylase β Subunit Gene: Exon-Intron Definition and Mutation Spectrum in Spanish and Latin American Propionic Acidemia Patients (original) (raw)
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Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 1999
Propionic acidemia is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of intermediary metabolism. It is caused by a deficiency of the mitochondrial enzyme propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC, EC 6.4.1.3), a heteropolymeric protein composed of two subunits, ␣ and . PCC requires ATP and biotin as cofactors for the reaction, the latter enzymatically added onto the ␣ subunit. We investigated coding sequence mutations in the ␣ subunit of PCC by analyzing fibroblast RNA from propionic acidemia patients deficient in ␣ subunit function by single-strand conformation polymorphism and direct sequencing. Five missense mutations and one short in-frame deletion were found among different patients. Four mutations were located in the putative biotin carboxylase domain, whereas the two others were within the 67-amino-acid C-terminal domain previously shown to be required to obtain biotinylation of the ␣ subunit. We analyzed fibroblast extracts for the presence of a biotinylated ␣ subunit by Western blot analysis using streptavidin coupled to alkaline phosphatase. Four of five cell lines failed to show a biotinylated ␣ subunit, regardless of the position of the mutations within the coding sequence. Two mutations located in the biotinylation domain were expressed in an Escherichia coli-based system and shown to abolish biotinylation of the domain. The results suggest that most mutations have a severe impact on the stability or the functionality of the ␣ subunit.
Human Genetics, 1997
Propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) is a mitochondrial, biotin-dependent enzyme involved in the catabolism of branched chain amino acids, odd chain fatty acids, and other metabolites. PCC consists of non-identical subunits, α and β, encoded by the PCCA and PCCB genes, respectively. Inherited deficiency of PCC due to mutations in either the PCCA or the PCCB gene results in propionic acidemia (PA), a clinically heterogeneous disorder with a severe, often lethal, neonatal form, and a mild, later onset form. To characterize PCCA gene mutations responsible for PCC deficiency, we analyzed RT-PCR products obtained from cultured fibroblasts from Spanish PCC-α deficient patients. In three patients, smaller than normal PCR products were observed, and sequence analysis revealed the deletion of a 54-bp exon in the cDNA. Sequencing of genomic DNA from these three patients led to the identification of three novel mutations in the PCCA gene, two short deletions and one small insertion, adjacent to short direct repeats, and all of them affecting the consensus splice sites of the skipped exon. These mutations, 1771IVS-2del9, 1824IVS+3del4, and 1824IVS+3insCT, are the cause of the aberrant splicing of the PCCA pre-mRNA and result in an in-frame deletion of 54 nucleotides in the cDNA, probably leading to an unstable protein structure which is responsible for the lack of activity leading to PCC deficiency in these patients.
BMC Medical Genetics, 2020
Background Propionic acidemia (PA) is an autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by the deficiency of the mitochondrial protein propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC) and is associated with pathogenic variants in either of the two genes PCCA or PCCB. The present study aimed to identify the genetic cause of three Chinese patients with PA. Case presentation Three Chinese PA patients were diagnosed by using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry(GC-MS), tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) and molecular diagnostic methods. All patients had onset in the neonatal period. One patient died of infection and metabolic decompensation, and the other two had mild to moderate developmental delay/mental retardation. Mutation analysis of the PCCA gene identified that patient 1 carried the compound heterozygous c.1288C > T(p.R430X) and c.2002G > A(p.G668R), and patient 2 was homozygous for the c.1426C > T(p.R476X) mutation. Mutation analysis of the PCCB gene identified that patient 3 harbored the...
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 1999
The inherited metabolic disease propionic acidemia (PA) can result from mutations in either of the genes PCCA or PCCB, which encode the K and L subunits, respectively, of the mitochondrial enzyme propionyl CoA-carboxylase. In this work we have analyzed the molecular basis of PCCA gene defects, studying mRNA levels and identifying putative disease causing mutations. A total of 10 different mutations, none predominant, are present in a sample of 24 mutant alleles studied. Five novel mutations are reported here for the first time. A neutral polymorphism and a variant allele present in the general population were also detected. To examine the effect of a point mutation (M348K) involving a highly conserved residue, we have carried out in vitro expression of normal and mutant PCCA cDNA and analyzed the mitochondrial import and stability of the resulting proteins. Both wild-type and mutant proteins were imported into mitochondria and processed into the mature form with similar efficiency, but the mature mutant M348K protein decayed more rapidly than did the wild-type, indicating a reduced stability, which is probably the disease-causing mechanism. ß 0925-4439 / 99 / $^see front matter ß 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S 0 9 2 5 -4 4 3 9 ( 9 9 ) 0 0 0 0 8 -3 * Corresponding
A novel PCCB mutation in a Thai patient with propionic acidemia identified by exome sequencing
Human Genome Variation, 2015
Propionic acidemia (PA) is an inborn error of metabolism, caused by mutations in either the PCCA or PCCB gene, leading to mitochondrial accumulation of propionyl-CoA and its by-products. Here we report a 6-year-old Thai boy with PA who was born to consanguineous parents. Exome sequencing identified a novel homozygous frameshift insertion (c.379_380insA; p.T127NfsX160) in the PCCB gene, expanding its mutational spectrum.
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism Reports, 2019
Propionic acidemia (PA) is an autosomal recessive metabolic disorder. PA is characterized by deficiency of the mitochondrial enzyme propionyl CoA carboxylase (PCC) that results in the accumulation of propionic acid. Alpha and beta subunits of the PCC enzyme are encoded by the PCCA and PCCB genes, respectively. Pathogenic variants in PCCA or PCCB disrupt the function of the PCC enzyme preventing the proper breakdown of certain amino acids and metabolites. To determine the frequency of pathogenic variants in PA in our population, 84 Saudi Arabian patients affected with PA were sequenced for both the PCCA and PCCB genes. We found that variants in PCCA accounted for 81% of our cohort (68 patients), while variants in PCCB only accounted for 19% (16 patients). In total, sixteen different sequence variants were detected in the study, where 7 were found in PCCA and 9 in PCCB. The pathogenic variant (c.425G > A; p.Gly142Asp) in PCCA is the most common cause of PA in our cohort and was found in 59 families (70.2%), followed by the frameshift variant (c.990dupT; p.E331Xfs*1) in PCCB that was found in 7 families (8.3%). The p.Gly142Asp missense variant is likely to be a founder pathogenic variant in patients of Saudi Arabian tribal origin and is associated with a severe phenotype. All variants were inherited in a homozygous state except for one family who was compound heterozygous. A total of 11 novel pathogenic variants were detected in this study thereby increasing the known spectrum of pathogenic variants in the PCCA and PCCB genes.
Functional characterization of PCCA mutations causing propionic acidemia
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 2002
Propionic acidemia (PA, MIM 232000 and 232050) is caused by a deficiency of mitochondrial biotin-dependent propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC, EC 6.4.1.3), a heteropolymeric enzyme composed of a and h subunits, which are encoded by the PCCA and PCCB genes, respectively. The PCCA protein (a subunit) is responsible for the formation of carboxybiotin upon hydrolysis of ATP and contains a Cterminal biotin-binding domain and a biotin carboxylase domain, defined by homology with other biotin-dependent carboxylases, some of them characterized structurally. More than 24 mutations have been found in the PCCA gene in patients with PA, among them 14 missense mutations and one in-frame deletion, for which the precise molecular effect is unknown. In this study, we have established the pathogenicity of 11 PCCA mutations (10 missense and an in-frame deletion) by expression studies in deficient fibroblasts and in a cell-free in vitro system, and analyzed the effect of each mutation on PCC activity, protein stability and domain structure. The results show that most mutant proteins show an increased turnover and are functionally deficient, suggesting that the structural alterations they cause are incompatible with normal assembly to produce a stable, functional PCC oligomer. These results are discussed in the context of the genotype -phenotype correlations in PCCA-deficient PA patients. D
Propionic acidemia: mutation update and functional and structural effects of the variant alleles
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 2004
Mutations in the PCCA or PCCB genes, encoding both subunits of propionyl-CoA carboxylase, result in propionic acidemia, a life-threatening inborn error of metabolism with autosomal recessive inheritance. To date, 41 mutations in the PCCA gene and 54 in the PCCB gene have been reported, most of them single base substitutions causing amino acid replacements, and a variety of small insertions and deletions and splicing defects. A greater heterogeneity is observed in the PCCA gene, specially in Caucasians, with no prevalent mutations, while in the Japanese population three mutations account for more than half of the alleles studied. For the PCCB gene a limited number of mutations is responsible for the majority of the alleles characterized in both Caucasian and Oriental populations. These two populations show a diVerent mutational spectrum, only sharing some involving CpG dinucleotides probably as recurrent mutational events. Functional characterization of the mutant missense alleles has been accomplished using diVerent prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, and the structural consequences have been analyzed in the available crystal models. For the PCCA gene, the main molecular eVect of the expressed mutations is related to protein instability, except two mutations in the active site predictably aVecting ATP binding. In the PCCB gene the majority of the analyzed mutations are predicted to alter the active site conformation resulting in diminished activity. A few carboxy-terminal PCCB mutations aVect the interaction between subunits and the assembly with PCCA to form a functional PCC oligomer. The amount of normal transcripts resulting from some PCCA and PCCB splicing mutations has also been analyzed. Overall, the data generated from the expression analysis reveal potential genotype-phenotype correlations for this clinically heterogeneous disorder. 2004 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Molecular genetics and metabolism, 2018
Propionic acidemia (PA) is caused by mutations in the PCCA and PCCB genes, encoding α and β subunits, respectively, of the mitochondrial enzyme propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC). Up to date, >200 pathogenic mutations have been identified, mostly missense defects. Genetic analysis in PA patients referred to the laboratory for the past 15 years identified 20 novel variants in the PCCA gene and 14 in the PCCB gene. 21 missense variants were predicted as probably disease-causing by different bioinformatics algorithms. Structural analysis in the available 3D model of the PCC enzyme indicated potential instability for most of them. Functional analysis in a eukaryotic system confirmed the pathogenic effect for the missense variants and for one amino acid deletion, as they all exhibited reduced or null PCC activity and protein levels compared to wild-type constructs. PCCB variants p.E168del, p.Q58P and p.I460T resulted in medium-high protein levels and no activity. Variants p.R230C and p.C...
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism, 2002
Propionic acidemia can result from mutations in the PCCA or PCCB genes encoding the ␣ and  subunits, respectively, of propionyl-CoA carboxylase. We have developed a method based on complementation of the enzyme defect using a lipid-mediated transient transfection of the normal human PCCA or PCCB cDNA into primary fibroblasts. We demonstrate the reliability of this method for identification of the defective PCC gene in order to unequivocally approach the mutational analysis in the corresponding PCCA and PCCB genes. © 2002 Elsevier Science (USA)