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Published in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 1/2011

01-02-2011 | Original Article

Harderoporphyria due to homozygosity for coproporphyrinogen oxidase missense mutation H327R

Authors: Alev Hasanoglu, Manisha Balwani, Çiğdem S. Kasapkara, Fatih S. Ezgü, İlyas Okur, Leyla Tümer, Alpay Çakmak, Irina Nazarenko, Chunli Yu, Sonia Clavero, David F. Bishop, Robert J. Desnick

Published in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | Issue 1/2011

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Abstract

Hereditary coproporphyria (HCP) is an autosomal dominant acute hepatic porphyria due to the half-normal activity of the heme biosynthetic enzyme, coproporphyrinogen oxidase (CPOX). The enzyme catalyzes the step-wise oxidative decarboxylation of the heme precursor, coproporphyrinogen III, to protoporphyrinogen IX via a tricarboxylic intermediate, harderoporphyrinogen. In autosomal dominant HCP, the deficient enzymatic activity results primarily in the accumulation of coproporphyrin III. To date, only a few homozygous HCP patients have been described, most having Harderoporphyria, a rare variant due to specific CPOX mutations that alter enzyme residues D400–K404, most patients described to date having at least one K404E allele. Here, we describe a Turkish male infant, the product of a consanguineous union, who presented with the Harderoporphyria phenotype including neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, hemolytic anemia, hepatosplenomegaly, and skin lesions when exposed to UV light. He was homoallelic for the CPOX missense mutation, c.980A>G (p.H327R), and had massively increased urinary uroporphyrins I and III (9,250 and 2,910 μM, respectively) and coproporphyrins I and III (895 and 19,400 μM, respectively). The patient expired at 5 months of age from an apparent acute neurologic porphyric attack. Structural studies predicted that p.H327R interacts with residue W399 in the CPOX active site, thereby accounting for the Harderoporphyria phenotype.
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Metadata
Title
Harderoporphyria due to homozygosity for coproporphyrinogen oxidase missense mutation H327R
Authors
Alev Hasanoglu
Manisha Balwani
Çiğdem S. Kasapkara
Fatih S. Ezgü
İlyas Okur
Leyla Tümer
Alpay Çakmak
Irina Nazarenko
Chunli Yu
Sonia Clavero
David F. Bishop
Robert J. Desnick
Publication date
01-02-2011
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease / Issue 1/2011
Print ISSN: 0141-8955
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2665
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-010-9237-9

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