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Erschienen in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 3/2012

01.05.2012 | Original Article

Bile acid-CoA ligase deficiency—a new inborn error of bile acid metabolism

verfasst von: Catherine P. K. Chong, Philippa B. Mills, Patricia McClean, Paul Gissen, Christopher Bruce, Jens Stahlschmidt, A. S. Knisely, Peter T. Clayton

Erschienen in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | Ausgabe 3/2012

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Abstract

Born at 27 weeks gestation, a child of consanguineous parents of Pakistani origin required prolonged parenteral nutrition. She developed jaundice, with extensive fibrosis and architectural distortion at liver biopsy; jaundice resolved with supportive care. Serum γ-glutamyl transpeptidase values were within normal ranges. The bile acids in her plasma and urine were >85% unconjugated (non-amidated). Two genes encoding bile-acid amidation enzymes were sequenced. No mutations were found in BAAT, encoding bile acid-CoA : aminoacid N-acyl transferase. The patient was homozygous for the missense mutation c.1012C > T in SLC27A5, predicted to alter a highly conserved amino-acid residue (p.H338Y) in bile acid-CoA ligase (BACL). She also was homozygous for the missense mutation c.1772A > G in ABCB11, predicted to alter a highly conserved amino-acid residue (p.N591S) in bile salt export pump (BSEP). BACL is essential for reconjugation of bile acids deconjugated by gut bacteria, and BSEP is essential for hepatocyte-canaliculus export of conjugated bile acids. A female sibling born at term had the same bile-acid phenotype and SLC27A5 genotype, without clinical liver disease. She was heterozygous for the c.1772A > G ABCB11 mutation. This is the first report of a mutation in SLC27A5. The amidation defect may have contributed to cholestatic liver disease in the setting of prematurity, parenteral nutrition, and homozygosity for an ABCB11 mutation.
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Metadaten
Titel
Bile acid-CoA ligase deficiency—a new inborn error of bile acid metabolism
verfasst von
Catherine P. K. Chong
Philippa B. Mills
Patricia McClean
Paul Gissen
Christopher Bruce
Jens Stahlschmidt
A. S. Knisely
Peter T. Clayton
Publikationsdatum
01.05.2012
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease / Ausgabe 3/2012
Print ISSN: 0141-8955
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-2665
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-011-9416-3

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