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Novel OCRL1 Mutations in Patients With the Phenotype of Dent Disease

  • Boris Utsch
  • , Arend Bökenkamp
  • , Marcus R. Benz
  • , Nesrin Besbas
  • , Jörg Dötsch
  • , Ingo Franke
  • , Stefan Fründ
  • , Faysal Gok
  • , Bernd Hoppe
  • , Stephanie Karle
  • , Eberhard Kuwertz-Bröking
  • , Guido Laube
  • , Margarita Neb
  • , Matti Nuutinen
  • , Fatih Ozaltin
  • , Wolfgang Rascher
  • , Troels Ring
  • , Velibor Tasic
  • , Joanna A.E. van Wijk
  • , Michael Ludwig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

74 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Dent disease is an X-linked tubulopathy frequently caused by mutations affecting the voltage-gated chloride channel and chloride/proton antiporter ClC-5. A recent study showed that defects in OCRL1, encoding a phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate 5-phosphatase (Ocrl) and usually found mutated in patients with Lowe syndrome, also can provoke a Dent-like phenotype (Dent 2 disease). Methods: We investigated 20 CLCN5-negative males from 17 families with a phenotype resembling Dent disease for defects in OCRL1. Results: In our complete series of 35 families with a phenotype of Dent disease, a mutation in the OCRL1 gene was detected in 6 kindreds. All were novel frameshift (Q70RfsX88 and T121NfsX122, detected twice) or missense mutations (I257T and R476W). None of our patients had cognitive or behavioral impairment or cataracts, 2 classic hallmarks of Lowe syndrome. All patients had mild increases in lactate dehydrogenase and/or creatine kinase levels, which rarely is observed in CLCN5-positive patients, but frequently found in patients with Lowe syndrome. To explain the phenotypic heterogeneity caused by OCRL1 mutations, we performed extensive data-bank mining and extended reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis, which provided no evidence for yet unknown (tissue-specific) alternative OCRL1 transcripts. Conclusion: Mutations in the OCRL1 gene are found in approximately 23% of kindreds with a Dent phenotype. Defective protein sorting/targeting of Ocrl might be the reason for mildly elevated creatine kinase and lactate dehydrogenase serum concentrations in these patients and a clue to suspect Dent disease unrelated to CLCN5 mutations. It remains to be elucidated why the various OCRL1 mutations found in patients with Dent 2 disease do not cause cataracts.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)942.e1-942.e14
JournalAmerican Journal of Kidney Diseases
Volume48
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2006
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Dent disease
  • Lowe syndrome
  • cataract
  • creatine kinase (CK)
  • lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)
  • mental retardation
  • oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe gene (OCRL1)
  • tubulopathy
  • voltage-gated chloride channel and chloride/proton antiporter 5 gene (CLCN5)

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