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THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations

Disclosure: K. Koehler: None. F. Quitter: None. D. Landgraf: None. E. Streiff: None. M.A. Abdullah: None. S.S. Hassan: None. A. Huebner: None. S.A. Musa: None. Triple A syndrome (MIM*231550) is a rare autosomal recessive multisystemic disorder characterized by adrenal insufficiency, achalasia, alacr...

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Autores principales: Koehler, Katrin, Quitter, Friederike, Landgraf, Dana, Streiff, Eliane, Abdullah, Mohamed A, Hassan, Samar S, Huebner, Angela, Musa, Salwa A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554108/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1481
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author Koehler, Katrin
Quitter, Friederike
Landgraf, Dana
Streiff, Eliane
Abdullah, Mohamed A
Hassan, Samar S
Huebner, Angela
Musa, Salwa A
author_facet Koehler, Katrin
Quitter, Friederike
Landgraf, Dana
Streiff, Eliane
Abdullah, Mohamed A
Hassan, Samar S
Huebner, Angela
Musa, Salwa A
author_sort Koehler, Katrin
collection PubMed
description Disclosure: K. Koehler: None. F. Quitter: None. D. Landgraf: None. E. Streiff: None. M.A. Abdullah: None. S.S. Hassan: None. A. Huebner: None. S.A. Musa: None. Triple A syndrome (MIM*231550) is a rare autosomal recessive multisystemic disorder characterized by adrenal insufficiency, achalasia, alacrima and neurologic impairments. It is caused by defects in the nucleoporin ALADIN due to mutations in the encoding AAAS gene. We report the genetic and clinical data of triple A syndrome in a series of Sudanese children treated at the Gaafar Ibn Auf Children’s Tertiary Hospital, the largest children's referral hospital in Sudan. The initial diagnosis of triple A syndrome was based on pathognomonic clinical signs and symptoms. Furthermore, early morning serum cortisol levels below the reference range (<6 μg/dl) with high ACTH levels (>100 pg/ml) and/or cortisol below 500 nmol/l in an ACTH stimulation test as well as pathological barium swallow and Schirmer-test were criteria for diagnosis. The medical diagnosis was finally confirmed by mutation detection in the AAAS gene.We genetically investigated 19 families including 29 patients with clinically diagnosed triple A syndrome. We identified six different AAAS mutations mainly in a homozygous form including three nonsense mutations, one frameshift mutation leading to a truncated protein and two splice defects, among them the North African founder mutation c.1331+1G>A (intron 14) in 32 % (6 families). An 8 bp-deletion at the junction of exon 4/intron 4 in two families is a novel, yet undescribed mutation (c.394_399+2delCTGTCTGT). As this mutation destroys a donor splice site, it results in alternative splicing skipping exon 4, altering the protein sequence after amino acid E102 and leading to a premature stop codon shortly after. This is most likely associated with functional impairment of the truncated ALADIN protein. The second novel AAAS mutation is a 1 bp-deletion in exon 9 in three families, which results in a frameshift at amino acid tryptophan 284 and consequently a premature stop codon at position 7 of the new reading frame (c.852_852delG, p.Trp284Cysfs*7, or shortly p.W284fs). The most frequent mutation in this large Sudanese patient series was a previously described mutation in exon 9 (c.934C>T, p.Arg312*) present in 37 % (seven families).Genotype/phenotype analyses revealed a highly variable occurrence of the three main symptoms, age of onset and severity of the disease between patients with the same AAAS mutation and even within one family. The rate of 95 % mutations in a homozygous form reflects the high rate of consanguinity in the Sudanese population.In summary, triple A syndrome seems to be an underdiagnosed disease outside a specialized paediatric endocrinological department in Sudan as many cases presented late with adrenal crises. An early molecular genetic diagnosis, e.g. in siblings, can be important to avoid hypoglycaemic crises with a potential lethal outcome. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023
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spelling pubmed-105541082023-10-06 THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations Koehler, Katrin Quitter, Friederike Landgraf, Dana Streiff, Eliane Abdullah, Mohamed A Hassan, Samar S Huebner, Angela Musa, Salwa A J Endocr Soc Pediatric Endocrinology Disclosure: K. Koehler: None. F. Quitter: None. D. Landgraf: None. E. Streiff: None. M.A. Abdullah: None. S.S. Hassan: None. A. Huebner: None. S.A. Musa: None. Triple A syndrome (MIM*231550) is a rare autosomal recessive multisystemic disorder characterized by adrenal insufficiency, achalasia, alacrima and neurologic impairments. It is caused by defects in the nucleoporin ALADIN due to mutations in the encoding AAAS gene. We report the genetic and clinical data of triple A syndrome in a series of Sudanese children treated at the Gaafar Ibn Auf Children’s Tertiary Hospital, the largest children's referral hospital in Sudan. The initial diagnosis of triple A syndrome was based on pathognomonic clinical signs and symptoms. Furthermore, early morning serum cortisol levels below the reference range (<6 μg/dl) with high ACTH levels (>100 pg/ml) and/or cortisol below 500 nmol/l in an ACTH stimulation test as well as pathological barium swallow and Schirmer-test were criteria for diagnosis. The medical diagnosis was finally confirmed by mutation detection in the AAAS gene.We genetically investigated 19 families including 29 patients with clinically diagnosed triple A syndrome. We identified six different AAAS mutations mainly in a homozygous form including three nonsense mutations, one frameshift mutation leading to a truncated protein and two splice defects, among them the North African founder mutation c.1331+1G>A (intron 14) in 32 % (6 families). An 8 bp-deletion at the junction of exon 4/intron 4 in two families is a novel, yet undescribed mutation (c.394_399+2delCTGTCTGT). As this mutation destroys a donor splice site, it results in alternative splicing skipping exon 4, altering the protein sequence after amino acid E102 and leading to a premature stop codon shortly after. This is most likely associated with functional impairment of the truncated ALADIN protein. The second novel AAAS mutation is a 1 bp-deletion in exon 9 in three families, which results in a frameshift at amino acid tryptophan 284 and consequently a premature stop codon at position 7 of the new reading frame (c.852_852delG, p.Trp284Cysfs*7, or shortly p.W284fs). The most frequent mutation in this large Sudanese patient series was a previously described mutation in exon 9 (c.934C>T, p.Arg312*) present in 37 % (seven families).Genotype/phenotype analyses revealed a highly variable occurrence of the three main symptoms, age of onset and severity of the disease between patients with the same AAAS mutation and even within one family. The rate of 95 % mutations in a homozygous form reflects the high rate of consanguinity in the Sudanese population.In summary, triple A syndrome seems to be an underdiagnosed disease outside a specialized paediatric endocrinological department in Sudan as many cases presented late with adrenal crises. An early molecular genetic diagnosis, e.g. in siblings, can be important to avoid hypoglycaemic crises with a potential lethal outcome. Presentation: Thursday, June 15, 2023 Oxford University Press 2023-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10554108/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1481 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Pediatric Endocrinology
Koehler, Katrin
Quitter, Friederike
Landgraf, Dana
Streiff, Eliane
Abdullah, Mohamed A
Hassan, Samar S
Huebner, Angela
Musa, Salwa A
THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title_full THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title_fullStr THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title_full_unstemmed THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title_short THU232 Genetic Study In A Series Of 29 Triple A Syndrome Patients From 19 Sudanese Families - Identification Of Two Novel AAAS Mutations
title_sort thu232 genetic study in a series of 29 triple a syndrome patients from 19 sudanese families - identification of two novel aaas mutations
topic Pediatric Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10554108/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvad114.1481
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