Functional polymorphism of the human arylamine N-acetyltransferase type 1 gene caused by (CT)-T-190 and G(560)A mutations


Autoria(s): Butcher, NJ; Ilett, KF; Minchin, RF
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

Human N-acetyltransferase type 1 (NAT1) catalyses the N- or O-acetylation of various arylamine and heterocyclic amine substrates and is able to bioactivate several known carcinogens. Despite wide inter-individual variability in activity, historically, NAT1 was considered to be monomorphic in nature. However, recent reports of allelic variation at the NAT1 locus suggest that it may be a polymorphically expressed enzyme. In the present study, peripheral blood mononuclear cell NAT1 activity in 85 individuals was found to be bimodally distributed with approximately 8% of the population being slow acetylators. Subsequent sequencing of the individuals having slow acetylator status showed all to have either a (CT)-T-190 or G(560)A base substitution located in the protein encoding region of the NAT1 gene. The (CT)-T-190 base substitution changed a highly conserved Arg(64), which others have shown to be essential for fully functional NAT1 protein. The (CT)-T-190 mutation has not been reported previously and we have named it NAT1*17. The G(560)A mutation is associated with the base substitutions previously observed in the NAT1*10 allele and this variant (NAT1*14) encodes for a protein with reduced acetylation capacity. A novel method using linear PCR and dideoxy terminators was developed for the detection of NAT1*14 and NAT1*17. Neither of these variants was found in the rapid acetylator population. We conclude that both the (CT)-T-190 (NAT1*17) and G(560)A (NAT1*14) NAT1 structural variants are involved in a distinct NAT1 polymorphism. Because NAT1 can bioactivate several carcinogens, this polymorphism may have implications for cancer risk in individual subjects. (C) 1998 Chapman & Hall Ltd.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:34690

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology #Genetics & Heredity #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Human #N-acetyltransferase #Nat1 #Polymorphism #Metabolic-activation #Polyadenylation Polymorphism #Colorectal-cancer #Nat1 #Acetylation #Liver #Hydroxyarylamines #Association #Bladder #Locus
Tipo

Journal Article