Abstract

The congenital factor VII deficiency (FVIID) is a rare autosomal recessive haemorrhagic disease caused by mutations in the F7 gene. The aim of this study was to identify the mutations causing FVII deficiency and explain the genotype-phenotype association in two unrelated Chinese patients. Mutation detection was conducted by sequencing the whole F7 gene coding exons, exon-intron boundaries and the untranslated regions of 3' and 5'. Then, the genetic information was analyzed to predict the structures of the mutated proteins. A total of four different mutations were detected, including three missense mutations (c.64G>A, c.286A>G, and c.722C>A, predicting p.Gly22Ser, p.Arg96Gly, p.Thr241Asn, respectively) and one insertion mutation (c.204_205insCGGC, predicting p. Leu68Argfs ∗ 37), among which two were reported for the first time (p.Arg96Gly, p.Leu68Argfs ∗ 37). Multiple sequence alignments of FVII protein revealed that the residues p.Arg96 and p.Thr241 were highly conserved. The novel missense mutation p.Arg96Gly was determined as damaging with online software Polyphen-2 and SIFT. We investigated two asymptomatic patients diagnosed with severe FVII deficiency and identified two novel mutations (the mutation p.Arg96Gly and p.Leu68Argfs ∗ 37). Identification of the F7 mutations was important for genetic counseling and accurate prediction of the inheritance pattern.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call