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A familial syndrome of hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria due to mutations in the calcium-sensing receptor.

by: S. H. Pearce, C. Williamson, O. Kifor, M. Bai, M. G. Coulthard, M. Davies, N. Lewis-Barned, D. McCredie, H. Powell, P. Kendall-Taylor, E. M. Brown, R. V. Thakker
The New England journal of medicine, Vol. 335, No. 15. (10 October 1996), pp. 1115-1122, doi:10.1056/nejm199610103351505  Key: citeulike:11869465

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Abstract

The calcium-sensing receptor regulates the secretion of parathyroid hormone in response to changes in extracellular calcium concentrations, and mutations that result in a loss of function of the receptor are associated with familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia. Mutations involving a gain of function have been associated with hypocalcemia in two kindreds. We examined the possibility that the latter type of mutation may result in a phenotype of familial hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria. We studied six kindreds given a diagnosis of autosomal dominant hypoparathyroidism on the basis of their hypocalcemia and normal serum parathyroid hormone concentrations, a combination that suggested a defect of the calcium-sensing receptor. The hypocalcemia was associated with hypercalciuria, and treatment with vitamin D resulted in increased hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal impairment. Mutations in the calcium-sensing-receptor gene were identified by DNA-sequence analysis and expressed in human embryonic kidney cells (HEK-293). Five heterozygous missense mutations (Asn118Lys, Phe128Leu, Thr151Met, Glu191Lys, and Phe612Ser) were detected in the extracellular domain of the calcium-sensing-receptor gene and shown to cosegregate with the disease. Analysis of the functional expression of three of the mutant receptors in HEK-293 cells demonstrated shifts in the dose-response curves so that the extracellular calcium concentrations needed to produce half-maximal increases in total inositol phosphate in the cells were significantly (P=0.02 to P<0.001) lower than those required for the wild-type receptor. Gain-of-function mutations in the calcium-sensing receptor are associated with a familial syndrome of hypocalcemia with hypercalciuria that needs to be distinguished from hypoparathyroidism.


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