Abstract

Summary Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a rare, inherited metabolic disease which is transmitted in an autosomal recessive pattern. PKU is caused by mutations in the gene encoding the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) enzyme. This review cites the most prominent methods for the detection of mutations in the PAH gene. Since the image of PKU transcends »simple« monogenic disease, the known data on non-coding PAH gene variants and their role and PKU modifier genes have been further reviewed. It has been shown that there is a significant correlation between mutant PAH genotypes and PKU phenotypes. However, genotype-phenotype correlation inconsistencies have also been found. This review discusses the possible causes of phenotypic inconsistencies, such as oversight of more than two mutations present in the patient’s PAH genotype, pitfalls of patient phenotypic classification (plasma phenylalanine concentration and phenylalanine tolerance), the inter-allelic complementation (positive and negative) phenomenon. A new therapeutic approach, tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) supplementation therapy, is an important innovation in the course of PKU patients’ treatment. How - ever, in countries where the BH4-loading test and BH4-supplementation therapy are not available, a genotype-based estimation of responsiveness to the therapy is a valuable approach. It enables BH4-potential benefit estimation, which provides vital information both for the patient and for the population. An optimal molecular diagnostics algorithm, established according to the published mutation frequencies in Serbian PKU patients, has been suggested. In the future, the molecular-genetic algorithm for PKU could be expanded to include a variety of transcriptional regulatory elements located in noncoding PAH gene regions and yet to be discovered modifier genes.

Highlights

  • Phenylketonuria (PKU, MIM# 261600) is a form of hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA), the most frequent inborn error of metabolism [1]

  • Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a rare, inherited metabolic disease which is transmitted in an autosomal recessive pattern

  • PKU is caused by mutations in the gene encoding the phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) enzyme

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Summary

Summary

Phenylketonuria (PKU) is a rare, inherited metabolic disease which is transmitted in an autosomal recessive pattern. In countries where the BH4-loading test and BH4-supplementation therapy are not available, a genotype-based estimation of responsiveness to the therapy is a valuable approach. It enables BH4-potential benefit estimation, which provides vital information both for the patient and for the population. U ovom revijskom radu su izneti mogu}i uzroci za neusagla{enost izme|u genotipa i fenotipa, kao {to su: propust u detekciji vi{e od dve mutacije prisutne u PAH genotipu pacijenta, neusagla{enost u fenotipskoj klasifikaciji pacijenata (koncentracija fenilalanina u serumu pre terapije i tolerancija fenilalanina), fenomen interalelske komplementacije (pozitivne i negativne). Klju~ne re~i: algoritam za detekciju mutacija, fenilalanin hidroksilaza, fenilketonurija, korelacija fenotipa i genotipa, predikcija na bazi genotipa, tetrahidrobiopterin

Introduction
Human phenylalanine hydroxylase gene
Noncoding PAH Gene Variants and Their Role
Modifier Genes
Phenotypic Diversity
Molecular Diagnostic Algorithm for PKU Patients in Serbia
HYPERPHENYLALANINEMIA AT NEONATAL SCREENING
Findings
MOLECULAR DIAGNOSIS OF A PATIENT
Full Text
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