[HTML][HTML] Mutations in the cystic fibrosis gene in patients with congenital absence of the vas deferens

M Chillón, T Casals, B Mercier, L Bassas… - … England Journal of …, 1995 - Mass Medical Soc
M Chillón, T Casals, B Mercier, L Bassas, W Lissens, S Silber, MC Romey, J Ruiz-Romero…
New England Journal of Medicine, 1995Mass Medical Soc
Background Congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens (CBAVD) is a form of male
infertility in which mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator
(CFTR) gene have been identified. The molecular basis of CBAVD is not completely
understood. Although patients with cystic fibrosis have mutations in both copies of the CFTR
gene, most patients with CBAVD have mutations in only one copy of the gene. Methods To
investigate CBAVD at the molecular level, we have characterized the mutations in the CFTR …
Background
Congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens (CBAVD) is a form of male infertility in which mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene have been identified. The molecular basis of CBAVD is not completely understood. Although patients with cystic fibrosis have mutations in both copies of the CFTR gene, most patients with CBAVD have mutations in only one copy of the gene.
Methods
To investigate CBAVD at the molecular level, we have characterized the mutations in the CFTR gene in 102 patients with this condition. None had clinical manifestations of cystic fibrosis. We also analyzed a DNA variant (the 5T allele) in a noncoding region of CFTR that causes reduced levels of the normal CFTR protein. Parents of patients with cystic fibrosis, patients with types of infertility other than CBAVD, and normal subjects were studied as controls.
Results
Nineteen of the 102 patients with CBAVD had mutations in both copies of the CFTR gene, and none of them had the 5T allele. Fifty-four patients had a mutation in one copy of CFTR, and 34 of them (63 percent) had the 5T allele in the other CFTR gene. In 29 patients no CFTR mutations were found, but 7 of them (24 percent) had the 5T allele. In contrast, the frequency of this allele in the general population was about 5 percent.
Conclusions
Most patients with CBAVD have mutations in the CFTR gene. The combination of the 5T allele in one copy of the CFTR gene with a cystic fibrosis mutation in the other copy is the most common cause of CBAVD. The 5T allele mutation has a wide range of clinical presentations, occurring in patients with CBAVD or moderate forms of cystic fibrosis and in fertile men.
The New England Journal Of Medicine