학술논문

Hypophosphatasia: a genetic-based nosology and new insights in genotype-phenotype correlation
Document Type
Article
Source
European Journal of Human Genetics: EJHG; February 2021, Vol. 29 Issue: 2 p289-299, 11p
Subject
Language
ISSN
10184813; 14765438
Abstract
Hypophosphatasia (HPP) is caused by pathogenic variants in the ALPLgene. There is a large continuum in the severity, ranging from a lethal perinatal form to dental issues. We analyzed a cohort of 424 HPP patients from European geographic origin or ancestry. Using 3D modeling and results of functional tests we classified ALPLpathogenic variants according to their dominant negative effect (DNE) and their severity. The cohort was described by the genotypes resulting from alleles s (severe recessive), Sd (severe dominant), and m (moderate). Many recurrent variants showed a regional anchor pointing out founder effects rather than multiple mutational events. Homozygosity was an aggravating factor of the severity and moderate alleles were rare both in number and frequency. Pathogenic variants with DNE were found in both recessive and dominant HPP. Sixty percent of the adults tested were heterozygous for a variant showing no DNE, suggesting another mechanism of dominance like haploinsufficiency. Adults with dominant HPP without DNE were found statistically less severely affected than adults with DNE variants. Adults with dominant HPP without DNE represent a new clinical entity mostly diagnosed from 2010s, characterized by nonspecific signs of HPP and low alkaline phosphatase, and for which a high prevalence is expected. In conclusion, the genetic composition of our cohort suggests a nosology with 3 clinical forms: severe HPP is recessive and rare, moderate HPP is recessive or dominant and more common, and mild HPP, characterized by low alkaline phosphatase and unspecific clinical signs, is dominantly inherited and very common.