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Xeroderma pigmentosum-variant patients from America, Europe, and Asia
ISSN
0022-202X
Date Issued
2008
Author(s)
Inui, Hiroki
Oh, Kyu-Seon
Nadem, Carine
Ueda, Takahiro
Khan, Sikandar C.
Metin, Ahmet
Gozukara, Engm
Slor, Hanoch
Busch, David B.
Baker, Carl C.
DiGiovanna, John J.
Tamura, Deborah
Gratchev, Alexei
Wu, W.
Chung, Kee Yang
Chung, Hye Jin
Azizi, Esther
Woodgate, Roger
Schneider, Thomas D.
Kraemer, Kenneth H.
DOI
10.1038/jid.2008.48
Abstract
Xeroderma pigmentosum-variant (XP-V) patients have sun sensitivity and increased skin cancer risk. Their cells have normal nucleotide excision repair, but have defects in the POLH gene encoding an error-prone polymerase, DNA polymerase eta (pol eta). To survey the molecular basis of XP-V worldwide, we measured pol eta protein in skin fibroblasts from putative XP-V patients (aged 8-66 years) from 10 families in North America, Turkey, Israel, Germany, and Korea. Pol eta was undetectable in cells from patients in eight families, whereas two showed faint bands. DNA sequencing identified 10 different POLH mutations. There were two splicing, one nonsense, five frameshift (3 deletion and 2 insertion), and two missense mutations. Nine of these mutations involved the catalytic domain. Although affected siblings had similar clinical features, the relation between the clinical features and the mutations was not clear. POLH mRNA levels were normal or reduced by 50% in three cell strains with undetectable levels of pol eta protein, indicating that nonsense-mediated message decay was limited. We found a wide spectrum of mutations in the POLH gene among XP-V patients in different countries, suggesting that many of these mutations arose independently.