Abstract

A male patient, born to unrelated Belgian parents, presented at 4 months with epistaxis, haematemesis and haematochezia. On physical examination he presented petechiae and haematomas, and a slightly enlarged liver. Serum transaminases were elevated to 5-10 times upper limit of normal, alkaline phosphatases were 1685 U/L (<720), total bilirubin was 2.53 mg/dl (<1.0), ammonaemia 69 μM (<32), prothrombin time less than 10%, thromboplastin time >180 s (<60) and alpha-fetoprotein 29723 μg/L (<186). Plasma tyrosine (651 μM) and methionine (1032 μM) were strongly increased. In urine, tyrosine metabolites and 4-oxo-6-hydroxyheptanoic acid were increased, but succinylacetone and succinylacetoacetate - pathognomonic for tyrosinemia type I - were repeatedly undetectable. Delta-aminolevulinic acid was normal, which is consistent with the absence of succinylacetone. Abdominal ultrasound and brain CT were normal.Fumarylacetoacetase (FAH) protein and activity in cultured fibroblasts and liver tissue were decreased but not absent. 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase activity in liver was normal, which is atypical for tyrosinemia type I. A novel mutation was found in the FAH gene: c.103G>A (Ala35Thr). In vitro expression studies showed this mutation results in a strongly decreased FAH protein expression.Dietary treatment with phenylalanine and tyrosine restriction was initiated at 4 months, leading to complete clinical and biochemical normalisation. The patient, currently aged 12 years, shows a normal physical and psychomotor development.This is the first report of mild tyrosinemia type I disease caused by an Ala35Thr mutation in the FAH gene, presenting atypically without increase of the diagnostically important toxic metabolites succinylacetone and succinylacetoacetate.

Highlights

  • Type I tyrosinemia (OMIM +276700), called hepatorenal tryosinosis, is a severe inborn metabolic disease affecting the tyrosine degradation pathway

  • We report here a case of a mild Type I Tyrosinemia, presenting typically with liver disease, increased tyrosine and methionine in plasma, but absence of the pathognomonic markers SA and SAA from urine

  • The diagnosis of type I tyrosinemia is supported by the demonstration of 4-oxo-6-hydroxyheptanoic acid in urine, a strongly decreased but measurable

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Summary

Introduction

Type I tyrosinemia (OMIM +276700), called hepatorenal tryosinosis, is a severe inborn metabolic disease affecting the tyrosine degradation pathway. It often presents with liver disease or liver failure with predominant bleeding tendency, Fanconi syndrome and/or rickets (for a comprehensive review, see [1]). Type I tyrosinemia is caused by a mutation in the gene encoding for the fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase or fumarylacetoacetase (FAH) enzyme, an enzyme in the tyrosine degradation pathway. Deficiency of this enzyme causes intracellular accumulation of fumarylacetoacetate (FAA), a tyrosinederived metabolite upstream of the deficient FAH enzyme. The occurrence of hepatocellular carcinoma is a dreaded complication

Materials and methods
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Scott CR
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