Purpose: To elucidate the status of a previously described missense mutation (1442A>T) reported in the Rab Escort Protein 1 gene of a patient with choroideremia.
Methods: The base substitution previously described by Donnelly et al. (Hum Mol Genet 1994;3:1017) was first confirmed by direct genomic DNA sequencing. The REP-1 cDNA region encompassing exons 10-14 was then specifically amplified from lymphocyte-derived mRNA. The effect on mRNA splicing of the mutation was analyzed by RT-PCR and cDNA sequencing.
Results: The 1442A>T change located at the penultimate nucleotide of exon 11 causes complete skipping of this exon during the processing of REP-1 mRNA. Loss of exon 11 leads to the translation of a premature termination codon within exon 12.
Conclusion: RT-PCR analyses demonstrated that the 1442A>T transversion previously described as a possible causative missense mutation does act as a splice-site error and gives rise to a truncated REP-1 protein. The virtual absence of any missense mutation found to be responsible for choroideremia makes the RT-PCR-based protein truncation test the most relevant genotypic diagnostic procedure for identifying mutations in the CHM gene.