Objective: To search for mutations in the GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH-I) gene in a set of Russian families with dopa-responsive dystonia (DRD).
Design: Six large families with 54 affected family members and 2 patients with sporadic DRD were examined. Mutation screening was performed using single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis followed by direct sequencing of the presumably mutated exons, in patients whose results showed a normal pattern on single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis, the entire coding region of the GCH-I gene was sequenced.
Results: Three new heterozygote point mutations located within exons 1, 2, and 4 of the GCH-I gene were identified in 3 families with autosomal-dominant inheritance. All these mutations are predicted to cause amino acid changes in the highly conserved regions of the gene. In patients from 3 other families and in both patients with sporadic DRD, no alterations in the translated portion of the GCH-I gene were observed.
Conclusions: Mutations in the coding region of the GCH-I gene account for a significant fraction (up to half) of the patients with a typical clinical picture of DRD. None of the mutations in the GCH-I gene described so far were detected more than once, which precludes the possibility of creating simple DNA testing procedures for routine clinical practice.