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A novel mutation of CLCNKB in a Korean patient of mixed phenotype of Bartter-Gitelman syndrome.


ABSTRACT: Bartter syndrome (BS) is an inherited renal tubular disorder characterized by low or normal blood pressure, hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis, and hyperreninemic hyperaldosteronism. Type III BS is caused by loss-of-function mutations in CLCNKB encoding basolateral ClC-Kb. The clinical phenotype of patients with CLCNKB mutations has been known to be highly variable, and cases that are difficult to categorize as type III BS or other hereditary tubulopathies, such as Gitelman syndrome, have been rarely reported. We report a case of a 10-year-old Korean boy with atypical clinical findings caused by a novel CLCNKB mutation. The boy showed intermittent muscle cramps with laboratory findings of hypokalemia, severe hypomagnesemia, and nephrocalcinosis. These findings were not fully compatible with those observed in cases of BS or Gitelman syndrome. The CLCNKB mutation analysis revealed a heterozygous c.139G>A transition in exon 13 [p.Gly(GGG)465Glu(GAG)]. This change is not a known mutation; however, the clinical findings and in silico prediction results indicated that it is the underlying cause of his presentation.

SUBMITTER: Cho HW 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5177689 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A novel mutation of <i>CLCNKB</i> in a Korean patient of mixed phenotype of Bartter-Gitelman syndrome.

Cho Hee-Won HW   Lee Sang Taek ST   Cho Heeyeon H   Cheong Hae Il HI  

Korean journal of pediatrics 20161130 Suppl 1


Bartter syndrome (BS) is an inherited renal tubular disorder characterized by low or normal blood pressure, hypokalemic metabolic alkalosis, and hyperreninemic hyperaldosteronism. Type III BS is caused by loss-of-function mutations in <i>CLCNKB</i> encoding basolateral ClC-Kb. The clinical phenotype of patients with <i>CLCNKB</i> mutations has been known to be highly variable, and cases that are difficult to categorize as type III BS or other hereditary tubulopathies, such as Gitelman syndrome,  ...[more]

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