pubmed:abstractText |
The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are a family of related genetic disorders that together are believed to affect one child in every 12,500 births in the USA. Our laboratory has developed a diagnostic service for classical late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (LINCL) by assay of tripeptidyl-peptidase I (TPP-I) activity using the fluorogenic peptide substrate Ala-Ala-Phe aminomethylcoumarin, followed by a screen for three mutations in the CLN2 gene. In addition, we have also begun to offer a limited diagnostic service for the juvenile (JNCL) and infantile (INCL) forms of the disease on the basis of mutation analysis of the CLN3 and CLN1 genes, respectively. Retrospective analysis of Australasian patients with a clinical suspicion of NCL has revealed that six are affected by LINCL, six by JNCL and, to date, two by INCL. Mutation analysis of our LINCL patients has shown that the three screened mutations, namely, the nonsense mutation R208X and the splice mutations IVS5-1 G > C and IVS5-1 G > A, constitute 83% of alleles.
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