Abstract

We report studies of two unrelated Japanese patients with 17alpha-hydroxylase deficiency caused by mutations of the 17alpha-hydroxylase (CYP17) gene. We amplified all eight exons of the CYP17 gene, including the exon-intron boundaries, by the polymerase chain reaction and determined their nucleotide sequences. Patient 1 had novel, compound heterozygous mutations of the CYP17 gene. One mutant allele had a guanine to thymine transversion at position +5 in the splice donor site of intron 2. This splice-site mutation caused exon 2 skipping, as shown by in vitro minigene expression analysis of an allelic construct, resulting in a frameshift and introducing a premature stop codon (TAG) 60 bp downstream from the exon 1-3 boundary. The other allele had a missense mutation of His (CAC) to Leu (CTC) at codon 373 in exon 6. These two mutations abolished the 17alpha-hydroxylase and 17,20-lyase activities. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis with a mismatch oligonucleotide showed that the patient's mother and brother carried the splice-site mutation, but not the missense mutation. Patient 2 was homozygous for a novel 1-bp deletion (cytosine) at codon 131 in exon 2. This 1-bp deletion produces a frameshift in translation and introduces a premature stop codon (TAG) proximal to the highly conserved heme iron-binding cysteine at codon 442 in microsomal cytochrome P450 steroid 17alpha-hydroxylase (P450c17). RFLP analysis showed that the mother was heterozygous for the mutation.

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