1. Academic Validation
  2. Thirteen new patients with guanidinoacetate methyltransferase deficiency and functional characterization of nineteen novel missense variants in the GAMT gene

Thirteen new patients with guanidinoacetate methyltransferase deficiency and functional characterization of nineteen novel missense variants in the GAMT gene

  • Hum Mutat. 2014 Apr;35(4):462-9. doi: 10.1002/humu.22511.
Saadet Mercimek-Mahmutoglu 1 Joseph Ndika Warsha Kanhai Thierry Billette de Villemeur David Cheillan Ernst Christensen Nathalie Dorison Vickie Hannig Yvonne Hendriks Floris C Hofstede Laurence Lion-Francois Allan M Lund Helen Mundy Gaele Pitelet Miquel Raspall-Chaure Jessica A Scott-Schwoerer Katalin Szakszon Vassili Valayannopoulos Monique Williams Gajja S Salomons
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Clinical and Metabolic Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada; Metabolic Laboratory, Department of Clinical Chemistry, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Abstract

Guanidinoacetate methyltransferase deficiency (GAMT-D) is an autosomal recessively inherited disorder of creatine biosynthesis. Creatine deficiency on cranial proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and elevated guanidinoacetate levels in body fluids are the biomarkers of GAMT-D. In 74 patients, 50 different mutations in the GAMT gene have been identified with missense variants being the most common. Clinical and biochemical features of the patients with missense variants were obtained from their physicians using a questionnaire. In 20 patients, 17 missense variants, 25% had a severe, 55% a moderate, and 20% a mild phenotype. The effect of these variants on GAMT Enzyme activity was overexpressed using primary GAMT-D fibroblasts: 17 variants retained no significant activity and are therefore considered pathogenic. Two additional variants, c.22C>A (p.Pro8Thr) and c.79T>C (p.Tyr27His) (the latter detected in control cohorts) are in fact not pathogenic as these alleles restored GAMT Enzyme activity, although both were predicted to be possibly damaging by in silico analysis. We report 13 new patients with GAMT-D, six novel mutations and functional analysis of 19 missense variants, all being included in our public LOVD database. Our functional assay is important for the confirmation of the pathogenicity of identified missense variants in the GAMT gene.

Keywords

GAMT; GAMT-D; missense variants; site-directed mutagenesis.

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