Publication | Open Access
A common NKCC2 mutation in Costa Rican Bartter's syndrome patients
58
Citations
25
References
1997
Year
GeneticsRenal PathologyImmunologyGenetic EpidemiologyPathologyCommon Nkcc2 MutationCosta Rican PatientsMendelian DisorderChronic Kidney DiseaseHypertonicityAutoimmune DiseasePotassium HomeostasisInborn Error Of ImmunityUrologyDisease MechanismGenetic DisorderCosta Rica SharePathogenesisPhysiologyMedicineCongenital SyndromeNephrologyKidney Research
Bartter's syndrome involves an overlapping set of closely related renal tubular disorders that can be subdivided into at least three clinical phenotypes: (1) the hypercalciuric antenatal Bartter variant; (2) the classic Bartter variant; and (3) the hypocalciuric-hypomagnesemic Gitelman variant. Recent data demonstrate that in several phenotypically indistinguishable cohorts, antenatal Bartter's syndrome is genetically heterogeneous. In these patients, mutations in the genes encoding either the bumetanide-sensitive Na-K-2Cl cotransporter (NKCC2) or the ATP-regulated potassium channel ROMK (KCNJI) have been identified. A cohort of 20 Costa Rican patients with a congenital syndrome that bears strong similarities to antenatal Bartter's syndrome but also has several distinct features has recently been described. In this cohort, we have identified a predominant mutation that introduces a premature stop in codon W625 of the NKCC2 gene (SCL12A1). This mutant allele is contained on a single common haplotype, suggesting that the majority of antenatal Bartter's syndrome patients in Costa Rica share a single common ancestor.
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