Molecular basis of SERPINC1 mutations in Japanese patients with antithrombin deficiency.
Background: Congenital antithrombin (AT) deficiency, which arises from various SERPINC1 defects, is an autosomal-dominant thrombophilic disorder associated with a high risk of recurrent venous thromboembolism.
Methods: We investigated SERPINC1 defects in Japanese patients with congenital AT deficiency who developed venous thromboembolism or had a family history of deep vein thrombosis. We analyzed the full DNA sequences of SERPINC1 exons and exon-intron junctions by PCR-mediated direct sequencing. If no mutation was found, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) was conducted for the relative quantification of the copy number of all exons in SERPINC1. If splice-site mutations were detected, mRNA splicing abnormalities were further investigated using an in vitro cell-based exontrap assay.
Results: We identified 19 different SERPINC1 abnormalities, including 8 novel mutations, in 21 Japanese patients with AT deficiency. These abnormalities were distributed as follows: 9 missense mutations (42.9%), 3 nonsense mutations (14.3%), 1 splice-site mutation (4.8%), 2 small insertions (9.5%), 2 deletion mutations (9.5%) and 4 large deletions (19.0%). Cases with large deletions of SERPINC1 included Alu-mediated gene rearrangements and non-Alu-mediated complex gene rearrangements; the latter could conceivably be explained using the fork stalling and template switching (FoSTeS) model.
Conclusions: We identified a variety of SERPINC1 defects in Japanese patients with AT deficiency. The SERPINC1 mutations detected in patients with type I AT deficiency included single nucleotide missense or nonsense mutations, small intragenic insertions or deletions, and large genomic structural deletions. Large deletions of SERPINC1 were caused by various recurrent or non-recurrent complex genomic rearrangement mutations.