MEFV Gene Profile in Northwest of Iran, Twelve Common MEFV Gene Mutations Analysis in 216 Patients with Familial Mediterranean Fever
Authors
Abstract:
Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) is a hereditary autoinflammatory disease with autosomal recessive inheritance pattern often seen around the Mediterranean Sea. It is characterized by recurrent episodes of fever and polyserositis and rash. Recently, MEFV gene analysis determines the definitive diagnosis of FMF. In this study, we analyzed 12 MEFV gene mutations in more than 200 FMF patients, previously diagnosed by Tel-Hashomer clinical criteria, in northwest of Iran, located in the proximity of the Mediterranean Sea. In the northwest of Iran (Ardabil), 216 patients with FMF diagnosis, based on Tel-Hashomer criteria, referred to the genetic laboratory to be tested for the following mutations; P369S, F479L, M680I(G/C), M680I(G/A), I692del, M694V, M694I, K695R, V726A, A744S, R761H, E148Q. All patients were screened for MEFV gene mutations by a reverse hybridization assay (FMF Strip Assay, Vienna lab, Vienna, Austria) according to manufacturer’s instructions. Among these FMF patients, no mutation was detected in 51 (23/62%) patients, but 165 (76/38%) patients had one or two mutations, 33 patients (15/28%) homozygous, 86 patients (39/81%) compound heterozygous and 46 patients (21/29%) were heterozygous. The most common mutations were M694V (23/61%), V726A (11/11%) and E148Q (9/95%) respectively.MEFV gene mutations showed similarities and dissimilarities in different ethnic groups, while it is common among Arabs and Armenians genotype. Since common 12 MEFV gene analysis could not detect up to 50% of our patients, who had FMF on the basis of clinical Tel-Hashomer criteria, clinical criteria is still the best way in the diagnosis of FMF in this area.
similar resources
mefv gene profile in northwest of iran, twelve common mefv gene mutations analysis in 216 patients with familial mediterranean fever
familial mediterranean fever (fmf) is a hereditary autoinflammatory disease with autosomal recessive inheritance pattern often seen around the mediterranean sea. it is characterized by recurrent episodes of fever and polyserositis and rash. recently, mefv gene analysis determines the definitive diagnosis of fmf. in this study, we analyzed 12 mefv gene mutations in more than 200 fmf patients, pr...
full textCommon MEFV Mutations in Palestinian Patients with Familial Mediterranean Fever
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive inflammatory disorder caused by mutations in the MEFV gene that encodes the pyrin protein. The disease is relatively common among people originating from the Mediterranean areas. The aim of this study was to determine the common MEFV gene mutations in 270 Palestinian patients diagnosed with FMF. The patients were screened for four com...
full textAnalysis of the three most common MEFV mutations in 412 patients with familial Mediterranean fever.
BACKGROUND Familial Mediterranean fever is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by recurrent attacks of fever and serositis. The disease is caused by mutations in the MEFV gene, presumed to act as a down-regulator of inflammation within the polymorphonuclear cells. OBJECTIVES To present the results of 412 FMF patients genotyped for three MEFV mutations, M694V, V726A and E148Q. RESUL...
full textFamilial Mediterranean fever gene (MEFV) mutations in patients with rheumatic heart disease.
Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessively inherited inflammatory disease that primarily affects Jews, Armenians, Turks, and Arabs. It is characterised by recurrent self limited attacks of fever accompanied by inflammation of the peritoneum, synovium, and pleura. The gene responsible for FMF (MEFV) has been cloned recently on the short arm of chromosome 16 and more than 20 m...
full textGenetic analysis of MEFV mutation negative familial Mediterranean fever for non-MEFV mutations is rarely effective
Background Systemic autoinflammatory diseases (SAIDs) are a group of diseases characterized by episodes of inflammation, usually manifested with fever and a variety of symptoms, including skin-rash, arthritis and abdominal pain. A clinical overlap between different SAIDs, may cause diagnosis uncertainty. Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), the prototype of the autoinflammatory syndrome, is mani...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 40 issue 1
pages 68- 72
publication date 2015-01-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023