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. 1999;44(2):91-5.
doi: 10.1007/s100380050116.

Novel mutations, including the second most common in Japan, in the beta-hexosaminidase alpha subunit gene, and a simple screening of Japanese patients with Tay-Sachs disease

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Novel mutations, including the second most common in Japan, in the beta-hexosaminidase alpha subunit gene, and a simple screening of Japanese patients with Tay-Sachs disease

A Tanaka et al. J Hum Genet. 1999.

Abstract

Two novel mutations of the beta-hexosaminidase alpha subunit gene were identified in Japanese patients with the infantile form of Tay-Sachs disease. One mutation was a one-base deletion at nt613C, which generated a stop codon at two codons downstream, in three unrelated patients. The other mutation was a one-base substitution of G-to-A at IVS 5, +1, which caused a splicing abnormality, in one patient. A missense mutation of R170W, which has already been reported in other ethnic groups, was also newly identified in one patient. In 1993, the most common mutation (IVS 5, -1G-->T) in Japanese patients with Tay-Sachs disease was reported as the major mutation in Japan accounting for 80% of 56 mutant alleles from 28 unrelated patients. The deletion of nt613C was the second most common mutation, accounting for 5% of the mutant alleles. The previously reported mutation IVS 5, -1G-->T and the nt613C deletion found in this study together accounted for 85% of the mutations causing Tay-Sachs disease among Japanese. Since these two mutations were located in or close to exon 6 and since they abolish Fok I (IVS 5, -1G-->T) and Sfa NI (nt613C deletion) restriction sites, respectively, they were screened rapidly by single polymerase chain reaction followed by digestion with these enzymes.

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