Abstract

Cystinuria (OMIM 220100) is an inborn congenital disorder characterised by a defective cystine metabolism resulting in the formation of cystine stones. Among the heterogeneous group of kidney stone diseases, cystinuria is the only disorder which is exclusively caused by gene mutations. So far, two genes responsible for cystinuria have been identified: SLC3A1 (chromosome 2p21) encodes the heavy subunit rBAT of a renal b0,+ transporter while SLC7A9 (chromosome 19q12) encodes its interacting light subunit b0,+AT. Mutations in SLC3A1 are generally associated with an autosomal-recessive mode of inheritance whereas SLC7A9 variants result in a broad clinical variability even within the same family. The detection rate for mutations in these genes is larger than 85%, but it is influenced by the ethnic origin of a patient and the pathophysiological significance of the mutations. In addition to isolated cystinuria, patients suffering from the hypotonia-cystinuria syndrome have been reported carrying deletions including at least the SLC3A1 and the PREPL genes in 2p21. By extensive molecular screening studies in large cohort of patients a broad spectrum of mutations could be identified, several of these variants were functionally analysed and thereby allowed insights in the pathology of the disease as well as in the renal trafficking of cystine and the dibasic amino acids. In our review we will summarize the current knowledge on the physiological and the genetic basis of cystinuria as an inborn cause of kidney stones, and the application of this knowledge in genetic testing strategies.

Highlights

  • Cystinuria (OMIM 220100) is an inborn congenital disorder characterised by a defective cystine metabolism resulting in the formation of cystine stones

  • The incidence of kidney stone diseases has increased over the last decades in the industrial countries to nearly

  • After identification of the molecular basis of the disease a new classification was suggested: the autosomal recessively inherited type I cystinuria which is mainly caused by SLC3A1 mutations, and the incomplete autosomal dominant non-type I cystinuria associated with

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Summary

Introduction

Cystinuria (OMIM 220100) is an inborn congenital disorder characterised by a defective cystine metabolism resulting in the formation of cystine stones. Non-type I heterozygotes show a variable urinary hyperexcretion of cystine and the dibasic amino acids, in some carriers stone formation has been reported [10]. After identification of the molecular basis of the disease a new classification was suggested: the autosomal recessively inherited type I cystinuria which is mainly caused by SLC3A1 mutations, and the incomplete autosomal dominant non-type I cystinuria associated with

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