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Case Reports
. 1999 Aug 30;1454(3):270-4.
doi: 10.1016/s0925-4439(99)00044-7.

A novel mutation in the CYBB gene resulting in an unexpected pattern of exon skipping and chronic granulomatous disease

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Free article
Case Reports

A novel mutation in the CYBB gene resulting in an unexpected pattern of exon skipping and chronic granulomatous disease

D Noack et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .
Free article

Abstract

Chronic granulomatous disease is a rare inherited disorder caused by non-existent or severely decreased phagocyte superoxide production that results in a severe defect in host defense and consequent predisposition to microbial infection. The enzyme responsible for superoxide production, NADPH oxidase, involves at least five components. An absence of, or a defect in, any one of four of these proteins (p47(phox), p67(phox), p22(phox) and gp91(phox)) gives rise to the known types of chronic granulomatous disease. The most common form of inheritance is X-linked and is due to mutations in the CYBB gene that encodes gp91(phox), the large subunit of flavocytochrome b, the terminal electron donor of the oxidase. We have recently reported a large number of mutations in this gene revealing a broad range of defects, including large and small deletions, and frameshift, nonsense, missense, splice region and regulatory region mutations. Here we report a patient who has an unusual type of mutation that results in the generation of a 'pseudo-exon' in the gp91(phox) mRNA and an unexpected pattern of splicing.

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