Volume 48, Issue 9 pp. 2627-2631
Research Article

Mutations in the amino terminus of ANKH in two US families with calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease

Charlene J. Williams

Corresponding Author

Charlene J. Williams

Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Thomas Jefferson University, 233 South Tenth Street, BLSB508, Philadelphia, PA 19107Search for more papers by this author
Adrian Pendleton

Adrian Pendleton

The Queen's University of Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland

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Gina Bonavita

Gina Bonavita

Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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Antonio J. Reginato

Antonio J. Reginato

Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Camden, New Jersey

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Anne E. Hughes

Anne E. Hughes

The Queen's University of Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland

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Shelly Peariso

Shelly Peariso

Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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Michael Doherty

Michael Doherty

City Hospital, Nottingham, UK

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Daniel J. McCarty

Daniel J. McCarty

Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

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Lawrence M. Ryan

Lawrence M. Ryan

Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

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First published: 11 September 2003
Citations: 69

Abstract

Objective

To analyze ANKH in families with calcium pyrophosphate dihydrate crystal deposition disease (CPPD) for disease-causing mutations.

Methods

Two US families (one of British ancestry and the other of German/Swiss ancestry) with autosomal-dominant CPPD, whose disease phenotypes were found to be linked to chromosome 5p15.1 (locus symbol CCAL2), were screened by direct sequencing for mutations in ANKH, a gene in the CCAL2 candidate interval that has been shown to harbor mutations in other families with CPPD. Observed sequence variants were confirmed by antisense sequencing, and expression of the mutant allele was verified by reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction amplification of messenger RNA followed by direct sequencing.

Results

The two US families displayed the same mutation at position 5 of the ANKH gene product (P5T). All affected members were heterozygous for the P-to-T variant, and the mutation was not seen in 204 control alleles. The two families displayed distinct disease haplotypes, suggesting that they were unrelated to each other.

Conclusion

These observations represent the fourth and fifth families with heritable CPPD whose disease phenotypes are linked to the CCAL2 locus and who have missense mutations in the amino terminus of ANKH. This same position (P5) was the site of a missense mutation in an Argentinean family of northern Italian ancestry; however, the sequence variant in that family generated a P5L mutation. The distinct disease haplotypes among the 3 families with P5 mutations suggest that the mutations arose independently and that the evolutionarily conserved P5 position of ANKH may represent a hot spot for mutation in families with autosomal-dominant CPPD.

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