Abstract

Owing to the small number of patients with tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) deficiency, no genotype-phenotype correlations have yet been identified. To investigate the genotype-phenotype correlation of R233H mutation in TH deficiency, we analyzed the clinical manifestations and treatment responses of four patients with the R233H homozygous mutation. Thirty-eight additional patients, available from the literature, known to be homozygous or heterozygous for the R233H mutation, were combined with the four cases from our hospital. Data for a total of 42 patients were retrieved. Our four patients showed clinical presentation consistent with Type A TH deficiency, and responded well to levodopa therapy, with an improvement in clinical symptoms within 1-2 weeks. In the 42 patients, 20 of 42 patients (48%) were homozygous and 22 (52%) were heterozygous for the R233H mutation. Of the 20 patients who were homozygous for the R233H mutation, a majority (80%) suffered from Type A TH deficiency. Of the 8 patients that were heterozygous for the R233H/the mutation located downstream of exon 11, 7 patients (86%) suffered from Type B TH deficiency. Of the 7 patients who were heterozygous for the R233H/nonsense mutation, 6 (86%) suffered from Type B TH deficiency. Genotype-phenotype correlation of R233H mutation was observed in TH deficiency. The homozygous R233H mutation frequently manifests as Type A TH deficiency, whereas R233H/nonsense mutation or any mutation located downstream of exon 11 manifests as Type B TH deficiency.

Highlights

  • Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) belongs to the aromatic amino acid hydroxylase family

  • Of the 7 patients who were heterozygous for the R233H/nonsense mutation, 6 (86%) suffered from Type B TH deficiency and only 1 patient (14%) exhibited Type A TH deficiency

  • Levodopa is the preferred treatment for TH deficiency, with most patients responding in a dramatic and long-lasting manner, especially in the patients with Type A TH deficiency, whereas other treatments such as rehabilitation have little effect [1, 19]

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Summary

Introduction

Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) belongs to the aromatic amino acid hydroxylase family. Direct mutation analysis has been performed in more than 100 TH deficiency patients, and R233H is the most frequent mutation, with 21 patients of 53 from China and 21 patients from the remaining other countries carrying this mutation [1–18]. This mutation is a G to A transversion at amino-acid position 698, resulting in histidine instead of arginine within the highly conserved domain of the TH protein, that is thought to interfere with the normal functioning of the TH protein

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