Journal
BLOOD COAGULATION & FIBRINOLYSIS
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 247-253Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/MBC.0b013e3282f564fd
Keywords
congenital afibrinogenemia; fibrinogen; homozygous; nonsense; mutation; thrombosis
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Congenital afibrinogenernia is a rare disorder characterized by the absence in circulating fibrinogen, a hexamer, composed of two sets of three polypeptides (Act, B beta and gamma). Although predisposition to thrombosis is a well known feature of dysfibrinogenemia, the relatively frequent thrombotic manifestations seen in congenital afibrinogenernia are puzzling. We herein report a mutational analysis of a young afibrinogenemic man from Turkey with multiple thrombo-embolic events involving both arteries and veins. Purified DNAs of the propositus was used for amplification by polymerase chain reaction of all the exons of the A subunit gene with primers allowing the analysis of the intron-exon boundaries. Analysis of the genes coding for the three fibrinogen chains of the propositus found a homozygous G to A transition in the exon 5 of the A alpha chain gene (g.g4277a; access number gi458553). The TGG to TGA codon change predicts a homozygous W315X in the A alpha chain (p.W334X when referring to the translation initiation codon). Both parents and his brother were found to carry this heterozygous mutation. This is the first report of a patient homozygous for this rare mutation associated with afibrinogenernia. Our patient was free of known risk factors as well as diseases associated with thrombosis including atherosclerosis, vasculitis, Buerger's disease,and it seems therefore probable that afibrinogenernia itself might have contributed to both arterial and venous thrombosis. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis 19:247-253 (c) 2008 Wolters Kluwer Health vertical bar Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
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