[PDF][PDF] Clustering of missense mutations in the C-terminal region of factor H in atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome

D Pérez-Caballero, C González-Rubio… - The American Journal of …, 2001 - cell.com
D Pérez-Caballero, C González-Rubio, ME Gallardo, M Vera, M López-Trascasa
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2001cell.com
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) is a microvasculature disorder leading to
microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute renal failure. Most cases
of HUS are associated with epidemics of diarrhea caused by verocytotoxin-producing
bacteria, but atypical cases of HUS not associated with diarrhea (aHUS) also occur. Early
studies describing the association of aHUS with deficiencies of factor H suggested a role for
this complement regulator in aHUS. Molecular evidence of factor H involvement in aHUS …
Hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) is a microvasculature disorder leading to microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, and acute renal failure. Most cases of HUS are associated with epidemics of diarrhea caused by verocytotoxin-producing bacteria, but atypical cases of HUS not associated with diarrhea (aHUS) also occur. Early studies describing the association of aHUS with deficiencies of factor H suggested a role for this complement regulator in aHUS. Molecular evidence of factor H involvement in aHUS was first provided by Warwicker et al., who demonstrated that aHUS segregated with the chromosome 1q region containing the factor H gene (HF1) and who identified a mutation in HF1 in a case of familial aHUS with normal levels of factor H. We have performed the mutational screening of the HF1 gene in a novel series of 13 Spanish patients with aHUS who present normal complement profiles and whose plasma levels of factor H are, with one exception, within the normal range. These studies have resulted in the identification of five novel HF1 mutations in four of the patients. Allele HF1Δexon2, a genomic deletion of exon 2, produces a null HF1 allele and results in plasma levels of factor H that are 50% of normal. T956M, W1183L, L1189R, and V1197A are missense mutations that alter amino acid residues in the C-terminal portion of factor H, within a region—SCR16–SCR20—that is involved in the binding to solid-phase C3b and to negatively charged cellular structures. This remarkable clustering of mutations in HF1 suggests that a specific dysfunction in the protection of cellular surfaces by factor H is a major pathogenic condition underlying aHUS.
cell.com