1. Academic Validation
  2. A new gene, encoding an anion transporter, is mutated in sialic acid storage diseases

A new gene, encoding an anion transporter, is mutated in sialic acid storage diseases

  • Nat Genet. 1999 Dec;23(4):462-5. doi: 10.1038/70585.
F W Verheijen 1 E Verbeek N Aula C E Beerens A C Havelaar M Joosse L Peltonen P Aula H Galjaard P J van der Spek G M Mancini
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Clinical Genetics, Erasmus University and Academic Hospital, Erasmus Medical Centre of Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. verheijen@ikg.fgg.eur.nl
PMID: 10581036 DOI: 10.1038/70585
Abstract

Sialic acid storage diseases (SASD, MIM 269920) are autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorders that may present as a severe infantile form (ISSD) or a slowly progressive adult form, which is prevalent in Finland (Salla disease). The main symptoms are hypotonia, cerebellar ataxia and mental retardation; visceromegaly and coarse features are also present in infantile cases. Progressive cerebellar atrophy and dysmyelination have been documented by magnetic resonance imaging (ref. 4). Enlarged lysosomes are seen on electron microscopic studies and patients excrete large amounts of free sialic acid in urine. A H+/anionic sugar symporter mechanism for sialic acid and glucuronic acid is impaired in lysosomal membranes from Salla and ISSD patients. The locus for Salla disease was assigned to a region of approximately 200 kb on chromosome 6q14-q15 in a linkage study using Finnish families. Salla disease and ISSD were further shown to be allelic disorders. A physical map with P1 and PAC clones was constructed to cover the 200-kb area flanked by the loci D6S280 and D6S1622, providing the basis for precise physical positioning of the gene. Here we describe a new gene, SLC17A5 (also known as AST), encoding a protein (sialin) with a predicted transport function that belongs to a family of anion/cation symporters (ACS). We found a homozygous SLC17A5 mutation (R39C) in five Finnish patients with Salla disease and six different SLC17A5 mutations in six ISSD patients of different ethnic origins. Our observations suggest that mutations in SLC17A5 are the primary cause of lysosomal sialic acid storage diseases.

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