Title of article :
Is there any relationship between mutation in CPS1 Gene and pregnancy loss?
Author/Authors :
Talebi, Mehrdad Department of Medical Genetics - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd , Vahidi Mehrjardi, Mohammad Yahya Medical Genetics Research Center - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd , Kalhor, Kambiz Department of Biological Science - Faculty of Science - University of Kordestan, Sanandaj , Dehghani, Mohammadreza Medical Genetics Research Center - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences, Yazd
Pages :
4
From page :
371
To page :
374
Abstract :
Background: Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 (CPS1) is a liver-specific enzyme with the lowest enzymatic rate, which determines the overall rate of the other reactions in the pathway that converts ammonia to carbamoyl phosphate in the first step of the urea cycle. Carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 deficiency (CPS1D), which usually presents as lethal hyperammonemia, is a rare autosomal recessive hereditary disease. Case: We report a case of a two-day-old female neonate with lethal hyperammonemia. The newborn infant was presented with hyperammonemia (34.7 𝜇g/ml; reference range 1.1–1.9). In Plasma amino acid analysis, there was a significant elevated levels of alanine (3,004 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 236–410 𝜇mol/L), glutamine (2,256 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 20–107 𝜇mol/L), asparagine (126 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 30–69 𝜇mol/L), glutamic acid (356 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 14–192 𝜇mol/L), aspartic acid (123 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 0–24 𝜇mol/L), and lysine (342 𝜇mol/L; reference range, 114–269 𝜇mol/L). We cannot diagnose the urea cycle disorder (UCD) CPS1D properly only based on the quantity of biochemical intermediary metabolites to exclude other UCDs with similar symptoms. Following next generation sequencing determined one homozygous mutation in CPS1 gene and also this mutation was determined in her parents. The identified mutation was c.2758G > C; p.Asp920His, in the 23 exon of CPS1. This novel homozygous mutation had not been reported previously. Conclusion: We applied whole exome sequencing successfully to diagnose the patient with CPS1D in a clinical setting. This result supports the clinical applicability of whole exome sequencing for cost-effective molecular diagnosis of UCDs.
Keywords :
CPS1 deficiency , Hyperammonemia , Urea cycle disorder , Whole exome sequencing
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year :
2019
Record number :
2447115
Link To Document :
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