• Nutrition · Apr 2014

    Case Reports

    Analysis of thiamine transporter genes in sporadic beriberi.

    • Valentina Bravatà, Luigi Minafra, Graziella Callari, Cecilia Gelfi, and Luigi Maria Edoardo Grimaldi.
    • Istituto di bioimmagini e fisiologia molecolare CNR-LATO, Cefalù PA, Scilly, Italy.
    • Nutrition. 2014 Apr 1;30(4):485-8.

    ObjectiveThiamine or vitamin B1 deficiency diminishes thiamine-dependent enzymatic activity, alters mitochondrial function, impairs oxidative metabolism, and causes selective neuronal death. We analyzed for the first time, the role of all known mutations within three specific thiamine carrier genes, SLC19 A2, SLC19 A3, and SLC25 A19, in a patient with atrophic beriberi, a multiorgan nutritional disease caused by thiamine deficiency.MethodsA 44-year-old male alcoholic patient from Morocco developed massive bilateral leg edema, a subacute sensorimotor neuropathy, and incontinence. Despite normal vitamin B1 serum levels, his clinical picture was rapidly reverted by high-dose intramuscular thiamine treatment, suggesting a possible genetic resistance. We used polymerase chain reaction followed by amplicon sequencing to study all the known thiamine-related gene mutations identified within the Human Gene Mutation Database.ResultsThirty-seven mutations were tested: 29 in SLC19 A2, 6 in SLC19 A3, and 2 in SLC25 A19. Mutational analyses showed a wild-type genotype for all sequences investigated.ConclusionThis is the first genetic study in beriberi disease. We did not detect any known mutation in any of the three genes in a sporadic dry beriberi patient. We cannot exclude a role for other known or unknown mutations, in the same genes or in other thiamine-associated genes, in the occurrence of this nutritional neuropathy.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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