Abstract

Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare disease belonging to the group of bradykinin-mediated angioedemas, characterized by recurring edematous episodes involving the subcutaneous and/or submucosal tissues. Most cases of HAE are caused by mutations in the SERPING1 gene encoding C1-inhibitor (C1-INH-HAE); however, mutation analysis identified seven further types of HAE: HAE with Factor XII mutation (FXII-HAE), with plasminogen gene mutation (PLG-HAE), with angiopoietin-1 gene mutation (ANGPT1-HAE), with kininogen-1 gene mutation (KNG1-HAE), with a myoferlin gene mutation (MYOF-HAE), with a heparan sulfate-glucosamine 3-sulfotransferase 6 (HS3ST6) mutation, and hereditary angioedema of unknown origin (U-HAE). We sequenced DNA samples stored from 124 U-HAE patients in the biorepository for exon 9 of the PLG gene. One of the 124 subjects carried the mutation causing a lysine to glutamic acid amino acid exchange at position 330 (K330E). Later, the same PLG mutation was identified in the patient’s son. The introduction of new techniques into genetic testing has increased the number of genes identified. As shown by this study, a biorepository creates the means for the ex-post analysis of recently identified genes in stored DNA samples of the patients. This makes the diagnosis more accurate with the possibility of subsequent family screening and the introduction of appropriate therapy.

Highlights

  • Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare but life-threatening disorder belonging to the group of bradykinin-mediated angioedemas

  • In C1-INH-HAE, mutations in the SERPING1 gene determine two different subtypes: In type I C1-INH-HAE, both the antigenic C1-INH concentration and the functional C1-INH activity are low, as no protein is generated from the mutant allele

  • We study the incidence of the missense PLG mutation (p.Lys330Glu, K330E) described earlier [3,4] in DNA samples obtained from our U-HAE patients and stored in a biorepository

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Summary

Introduction

Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare but life-threatening disorder belonging to the group of bradykinin-mediated angioedemas. Mutation analysis can distinguish seven types of nC1-INH-HAE: HAE with Factor XII mutation (FXII-HAE) [2], HAE with plasminogen gene mutation (PLG-HAE) [3,4], HAE with angiopoietin-1 gene mutation (ANGPT1-HAE) [5], HAE with kininogen-1 gene mutation (KNG1-HAE) [6], HAE with a myoferlin gene mutation (MYOF-HAE) [7], HAE with a heparan sulfateglucosamine 3-sulfotransferase 6 (HS3ST6) mutation [8], and hereditary angioedema of unknown origin (U-HAE) Concerning the latter, no diagnostic laboratory test exists. We study the incidence of the missense PLG mutation (p.Lys330Glu, K330E) described earlier [3,4] in DNA samples obtained from our U-HAE patients and stored in a biorepository

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