Genetic and Biochemical Studies of Hereditary Methemoglobinemia (NADH-Cytochrome b5 Reductase Deficiency
        The bulletin of the Yamaguchi Medical School Volume 42 Issue 3-4
        Page 49-53
        
    published_at 1995-12
            Title
        
        Genetic and Biochemical Studies of Hereditary Methemoglobinemia (NADH-Cytochrome b5 Reductase Deficiency
        
        
    
                
                    Creators
                
                    Shirabe Komei
                
                
            
            
                
                    Creators
                
                    Yubisui Toshitsugu
                
                
            
            
                
                    Creators
                
                    Takeshita Masazumi
                
                
            
    
        
            Source Identifiers
        
    
    
            Creator Keywords
        
            hereditary methemoglobinemia
            NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase
            genetic diagnosis
            x-ray structure
            catalytic mechanism
    Hereditary methemoglobinemia is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by a deficiency of NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase. In most cases enzyme deficiency occurs in red cells and symptom is only cyanosis due to elevated methemoglobin (type I). In about 10% of the cases deficiency is demonstrated in all the examined tissues and is accompanied by methemoglobinemia and severe neurological disorders (type II). Gene analyses of five independent families with I disease showed that point mutations leading to amino acid substitutions occur in all cases. Mutations found in three patients of type II disease were a point mutation, a deletion of 3 bases that leads to one amino acid deletion, and a mutation of splicing acceptor site of exon 9. Charasterization of recombinant type I and type II mutant enzymes syowed that type Ienzymes retained high enzyme activity but were unstable, wherews type II enzymes had low catalytic ability. Mutations in type I disease on three dimensional styucture of the enzyme residein the marginal portion of the enzyme that seem to participate in maintaining the enzyme structure, explain low catalytic efficiency of mutants.
        
        
            Languages
        
            eng
    
    
        
            Resource Type
        
        departmental bulletin paper
    
    
        
            Publishers
        
            Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine
    
    
        
            Date Issued
        
        1995-12
    
    
        
            File Version
        
        Version of Record
    
    
        
            Access Rights
        
        open access
    
    
            Relations
        
            
                
                
                [ISSN]0513-1812
            
            
                
                
                [NCID]AA00594272
            
    
        
            Schools
        
            医学部
    
                
