Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Salt-Wasting Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia: Detection of Mutations in CYP21B Gene in a Chilean Population1

1998; Oxford University Press; Volume: 83; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1210/jcem.83.9.5071

ISSN

1945-7197

Autores

Carlos Fardella, Helena Poggi, Pedro Pineda, Julia Soto, I Torrealba, Andreína Cattani, Eveline Oestreicher, A Foradori,

Tópico(s)

Genetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities

Resumo

The steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency (21OHD) is the most frequent cause of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. We have characterized the disease-causing mutations in the 21-hydroxylase genes of 63 patients with salt-wasting congenital adrenal hyperplasia from a Chilean population of Hispanic origin, a group that has been scarcely evaluated. Using allele-specific PCR, lesions were identified in 97 chromosomes out of 126 tested (77%). The most frequent findings were the gene deletion or large gene conversion (LGC) = 22.9%, I2 splice = 19%, R357W = 12.7%, and Q319X = 10.5%. We did not find alleles with the mutation F308insT and we found three alleles with the cluster E6. The frequency of the point mutation R357W was at least two times more frequent than the one found in Caucasians populations, but similar to that communicated in Asian populations; this finding may be explained by the Asian ancestry of our South-Amerindian population. The frequency of Q319X was also high, similar only to those patients studied in Italy and in a neighboring Argentinian population. In summary, this is a genetic characterization of 21OHD made in an almost pure Hispanic population in Latin America. The high frequency of deletion of CYP21B gene, I2 splice, R357W, and Q319X mutations probably reflects the European-Caucasian-Spanish influence of the conquerors, mixed with Amerindians of Asian ancestry and modulated by other European immigrations.

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