Mild orotic aciduria in UMPS heterozygotes: a metabolic finding without clinical consequences
May 1, 2017·,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,·
0 min read
Saskia B. Wortmann
Margaret A. Chen
Roberto Colombo
Alessandro Pontoglio
Bader Alhaddad
Lorenzo D. Botto
Tatiana Yuzyuk
Curtis R. Coughlin
Maria Descartes
Stephanie Grűnewald
Bruno Maranda
Philippa B. Mills
James Pitt
Catherine Potente
Richard Rodenburg
Leo A. J. Kluijtmans
Srirangan Sampath
Emil F. Pai
Ron A. Wevers
George E. Tiller
Additional Individual Contributors
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Elevated urinary excretion of orotic acid is associated with treatable disorders of the urea cycle and pyrimidine metabolism. Establishing the correct and timely diagnosis in a patient with orotic aciduria is key to effective treatment. Uridine monophosphate synthase is involved in de novo pyrimidine synthesis. Uridine monophosphate synthase deficiency (or hereditary orotic aciduria), due to biallelic mutations in UMPS, is a rare condition presenting with megaloblastic anemia in the first months of life. If not treated with the pyrimidine precursor uridine, neutropenia, failure to thrive, growth retardation, developmental delay, and intellectual disability may ensue. METHODS AND RESULTS: We identified mild and isolated orotic aciduria in 11 unrelated individuals with diverse clinical signs and symptoms, the most common denominator being intellectual disability/developmental delay. Of note, none had blood count abnormalities, relevant hyperammonemia or altered plasma amino acid profile. All individuals were found to have heterozygous alterations in UMPS. Four of these variants were predicted to be null alleles with complete loss of function. The remaining variants were missense changes and predicted to be damaging to the normal encoded protein. Interestingly, family screening revealed heterozygous UMPS variants in combination with mild orotic aciduria in 19 clinically asymptomatic family members. CONCLUSIONS: We therefore conclude that heterozygous UMPS-mutations can lead to mild and isolated orotic aciduria without clinical consequence. Partial UMPS-deficiency should be included in the differential diagnosis of mild orotic aciduria. The discovery of heterozygotes manifesting clinical symptoms such as hypotonia and developmental delay are likely due to ascertainment bias.
Type
Publication
J Inherit Metab Dis
Anemia
Megaloblastic
Child
Preschool
Female
Heterozygote
Humans
Infant
Intellectual Disability
Male
Multienzyme Complexes
Mutation
Orotate Phosphoribosyltransferase
Orotic Acid
Orotidine-5'-Phosphate Decarboxylase
Purine-Pyrimidine Metabolism
Inborn Errors
Pyrimidines
Urea Cycle Disorders
Inborn
Uridine