Folia Biologica
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Biology, Charles University 

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Fol. Biol. 2005, 51, 172-176

https://doi.org/10.14712/fb2005051060172

S65C and Other Mutations in the Haemochromatosis Gene in the Czech Population

Markéta Čimburová1, I. Půtová1, H. Provazníková2, D. Pintérová3, J. Horák4

1Center of Biomedical Sciences, Division of Cell and Molecular Biology, 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
2Center of Preventive Medicine, Division of Health of Children and Youth, 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
3Center of Biomedical Sciences, 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
4Department of Medicine I, 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic

Received July 2005
Accepted October 2005

HFE-Iinked hereditary haemochromatosis is a common autosomal recessive disease among Caucasians. The primary pathogenetic mechanism is excessive absorption of iron, which is deposited in various organs with their subsequent damage. In 1996 the gene responsible for haemochromatosis was detected - the HFE gene and its major mutation C282Y. The discovery of further mutations followed. Two sites of point mutations in the HFE gene, C282Y and H63D, are associated with more than 80% of haemochromatosis cases. Another mutation - S65C - was detected on 8% of chromosomes of haemochromatosis patients, which were negative for mutations C282Y or H63D. The objective of this study was to identify the allele frequency of S65C and other HFE mutations in the Czech population. DNA extracted from 481 randomly selected newborn screening cards (Guthrie cards) from all over the country was analysed by PCR-RFLP. No (0%) sample was identified as homozygous for S65C or C282Y mutation and 8 (1.67%) were homozygous for H63D mutation. Twelve (2.49%) samples were S65C heterozygous, 33 (6.86%) samples were C282Y heterozygous, and 128 (26.61 %) were H63D heterozygous. Of these, 11 (2.29%) carried one copy of each mutation, i.e. were compound heterozygous. Two samples were S65C/H63D compound heterozygous and nine were C282Y/H63D compound heterozygous. Allele frequencies for S65C, C282Y, and H63D were 1.25% (95% CI, ± 0.70), 3.43% (95% CI, ± 1.15), and 14.97% (95% CI, ± 2.25), respectively. The observed genotype frequency for S65C, C282Y, and H63D mutations in the Czech Republic agrees with those reported for other Central European populations.

Funding

This project was supported by the research goals MSM 111200002 and MSM 0021620814 of the 3rd Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague.

References

26 live references