Tay-Sachs disease in Moroccan Jews: deletion of a phenylalanine in the alpha-subunit of beta-hexosaminidase.

Citation
Navon, Ruth et L. Proia, Richard, Tay-Sachs disease in Moroccan Jews: deletion of a phenylalanine in the alpha-subunit of beta-hexosaminidase., American journal of human genetics , 48-I(2), 1991, pp. 412-419
ISSN journal
00029297
Volume
48-I
Issue
2
Year of publication
1991
Pages
412 - 419
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Tay-Sachs disease is an inherited lysosomal storage disorder caused by defects in the beta-hexosaminidase alpha-subunit gene.The carrier frequency for Tay-Sachs disease is significantly elevated in both the Ashkenazi Jewish and Moroccan Jewish populations but not in other Jewish groups.We have found that the mutations underlying Tay-Sachs disease in Ashkenazi and Moroccan Jews are different.Analysis of a Moroccan Jewish Tay-Sachs patient had revealed an in-frame deletion (delta F) of one of the two adjacent phenylalanine codons that are present at positions 304 and 305 in the alpha-subunit sequence.The mutation impairs the subunit assembly of beta-hexosaminidase A, resulting in an absence of enzyme activity.The Moroccan patient was found also to carry, in the other alpha-subunit allele, a different, and as yet unidentified, mutation which causes a deficit of mRNA.Analysis of obligate carriers from six unrelated Moroccan Jewish families showed that three harbor the delta F mutation, raising the possibility that this defect may be a prevalent mutation in this ethnic group.