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Original Article
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Volume 333:1313-1319 November 16, 1995 Number 20
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Adult-Onset Spinocerebellar Dysfunction Caused by a Mutation in the Gene for the {alpha}-Tocopherol–Transfer Protein
Takanari Gotoda, M.D., Makoto Arita, Ph.D., Hiroyuki Arai, Ph.D., Keizo Inoue, Ph.D., Takanori Yokota, M.D., Yoshihiro Fukuo, M.D., Yoshio Yazaki, M.D., and Nobuhiro Yamada, M.D.

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ABSTRACT

Background Patients with isolated vitamin E deficiency have an impaired ability to incorporate {alpha}-tocopherol into lipoproteins in the liver and usually have symptoms and signs of spinocerebellar dysfunction before adolescence. Accumulated evidence suggests that the {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer protein, which is presumed to function in the intracellular transport of {alpha}-tocopherol, is abnormal in these patients.

Methods We studied a patient from an isolated Japanese island who began to have ataxia, dysarthria, and sensory disturbances in the sixth decade of life. His serum vitamin E concentration was low (1.2 µg per milliliter [2.8 µmol per liter]). Exons of his gene for the {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer protein were analyzed by DNA sequencing. We also screened an additional 801 inhabitants of the island for the mutation. Both the normal and mutant {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer proteins were expressed in COS-7 cells and studied by immunoblot analysis and assay for {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer activity.

Results The patient was homozygous for a point mutation that replaces histidine (CAT) with glutamine (CAG) at position 101 of the gene for the {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer protein. When expressed in COS-7 cells, the missense mutation produced a functionally defective {alpha}-tocopherol–transfer protein with approximately 11 percent of the transfer activity of the wild-type protein. Of the 801 island inhabitants examined, 21 were heterozygous for the His101Gln mutation. In all affected subjects, including the patient, this mutation cosegregated with an intron-sequence polymorphism. The heterozygotes were phenotypically normal and had serum vitamin E concentrations that were on average 25 percent lower than those of normal subjects (mean [±SD], 7.5±2.2 vs. 10.1±2.8 µg per milliliter [17.4±5.1 vs. 23.4±6.5 µmol per liter]; P = 0.002).

Conclusions {alpha}-Tocopherol–transfer protein is a determinant of serum vitamin E concentrations. An abnormality in this protein is a cause of spinocerebellar dysfunction.


Source Information

From the Third Department of Internal Medicine (T.G., Y.Y., N.Y.) and the Department of Health Chemistry (M.A., H.A., K.I.), Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tokyo; the Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Tokyo Medical and Dental University (T.Y.); and the Second Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Nippon Medical School (Y.F.) — all in Tokyo, Japan.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Yamada at the Third Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Tokyo 113, Japan.

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Related Letters:

Retinitis Pigmentosa and Ataxia Caused by a Mutation in the Gene for the {alpha}-Tocopherol–Transfer Protein
Yokota T., Shiojiri T., Gotoda T., Arai H.
Extract | Full Text  
N Engl J Med 1996; 335:1770-1771, Dec 5, 1996. Correspondence

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