Cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) deficiency is the major cause of homocystinuria in humans. The most frequent symptoms of homocystinuria include: dislocated optic lenses, vascular disorders, skeletal abnormalities and mental retardation. Patients with this deficiency have elevated levels of homocyst(e)ine, methionine and low cysteine in their body fluids. These abnormal levels often partially or fully normalize upon treatment with pharmacological doses of vitamin B6. To investigate the molecular and biochemical basis for these conditions, it was necessary to determine the nucleotide and polypeptide sequence of CBS. We report here the human CBS cDNA sequence of 2,554 nucleotides encoding the CBS subunit of 551 amino acids. An intron of 214 bp appears to be retained in the 3'-untranslated region of most of the fibroblast and liver mRNA. We also report a frequent Mspl polymorphism in the 3'-untranslated sequence and two synonymous mutations in the coding region: 699C/T (Y233Y) and 1080C/T (A360A). The amino acid sequence similarity of human and rat CBS is greater than 90%; the enzyme also exhibits 52% similarity to O-acetylserine(thiol)-lyase from bacteria and plants. Lastly, we demonstrate that expression of the human enzyme in CHO cells yields enzymatically active protein of the expected size with a half-life of approximately 14 hrs.
Propionic acidaemia is an inborn error of organic acid metabolism caused by deficiency of propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC). Enzyme deficiency can result from mutations in either of the non-identical alpha- and beta-subunits. We have screened genomic DNA from patients with defects in the beta-subunit from two ethnic groups (Caucasians and Japanese) and detected three types of mutations in the same exon of the coding sequence of the beta-subunit: an insertion/deletion that replaces 14 nucleotides with 12 nucleotides of unrelated sequence and eliminates an Msp I site; a 3-bp deletion of a single isoleucine codon immediately proximal to that Msp I site; and a C-->T transition in the same Msp I site. The insertion/deletion was detected only in Caucasian patients in 11 of 34 mutant alleles; the C-->T transition was found only in Japanese patients in 4 of 12 mutant alleles. Following digestion of genomic DNA by Msp I, both of these mutations were detected on Southern blots by the presence of a 2.7-kbp band; they can be distinguished from one another by allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization following PCR amplification. These results underscore the independent origin of the mutations in the two populations and suggest a key role of this exon in the beta-subunit of PCC.
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