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Liver and Biliary Tract

Common local founder effects for Wilson's disease and hereditary hemochromatosis; mutation studies of a large family

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Pages 1014-1020 | Received 23 May 2012, Accepted 12 Jun 2012, Published online: 07 Jul 2012
 

Abstract

Wilson's disease (WND) and hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) are two metal loading diseases of copper and iron, respectively, and are both recessively inherited. In central Sweden, where HH is common, 9 Wilson kindred (14 members) were identified. Aims of the study were to test whether nine WND families shared a common origin, a common mutation and if carrying HFE mutations affected their phenotype Results. The nine families were traced through 13 generations to a common founder origin in the mid-seventeenth century. Despite identity of descent, four different ATP7B mutations appeared with homozygosity in four, with two different mutations, W779X and T977M. There were three compound heterozygotes, W779X/T977M, R1319X/H1069Q and one T977M combined with a new, previously not described mutation, probably of Finnish origin. The founder family also included 26 descendant kindred (55 members) with HH as shown by HFE mutations. This admixture coincided with a migration out of the original parish into hemochromatosis-rich localities. One WND patient had iron overload (serum ferritin 672 µg/l and raised liver enzymes), but lacked HFE mutations. In another family with serious hemochromatosis (two sons dying from bronze diabetes), the coinheritance of congenital spherocytosis was probably the cause rather than an additional effect of WND. Conclusions. WND though a rare disease may become aggregated like HH in certain areas due to local founder effects. Despite extensive pedigree studies leading back to the local founder family, the authors were unable to find a single defining mutation of the ATP7B gene.

Acknowledgement

The patients and their family members are gratefully acknowledged for their interest and assistance. The authors are also grateful for contacts with the patient's doctors, Sven Almer, Eva Bygren, David Lundgren and Ole Suhr. This study would not have been possible without generous support from the genealogists Mr Olof Stenum and Mr Georg Hansson.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

Supplementary Table I

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