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Familial lethal inheritance of a mutated paternal gene in females causing X-linked ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency
24
Citations
22
References
1997
Year
Mutated Paternal GeneCytogeneticsGeneticsPathologyMolecular GeneticsGermline GeneticsDisease Gene IdentificationEpigeneticsX-linked Ornithine TranscarbamylaseClinical GeneticsMendelian DisorderPublic HealthEnzyme ActivityMonogenic DisordersOtc DeficiencyFamilial Lethal InheritanceLeu148phe SubstitutionDevelopmental BiologyGenetic DisorderGenetic MechanismMedicine
A Leu148Phe substitution of the ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) gene was identified in a 2-year-old girl with OTC deficiency (14% of control). Her two elder sisters died in childhood of hyperammonemia, and the patient also died of OTC deficiency. Enzyme activity in Cos1 cells transfected by the mutant cDNA was undetectable, thereby indicating a definite pathogenic mutation. Familial gene analysis showed that the mother had wild-type OTC alleles on both X-chromosomes and the father was a mosaic for the mutant allele in his lymphocytes and spermatozoa. This clinical case shows that a somatic and germline mosaicism for a single-gene disorder led to an unusual pattern of X-linked inheritance in the family, and all three daughters in the family died of OTC deficiency. The possibility that inherited factors will lead to skewed X-inactivation needs to be considered.
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