We found five novel mutations in the tyrosinase gene involved in the pathogenesis of oculocutaneous albinism type IA or type IB (OCA-1A/B) in five unrelated patients.
Although tyrosinase mutations of OCA1 have been extensively analyzed in most populations worldwide, there is no systemic study of OCA1 mutation in Chinese patients.
We report a method to determine the mutations responsible for tyrosinase related albinism (OCA1) using a combination of polymerase chain reaction-single stranded conformational polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis and direct DNA cycle sequencing using fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides and an automated DNA sequencer based on infrared fluorescence technology.
In this report we present 5 additional mutations of the tyrosinase gene associated with type I-A OCA in four individuals, including 2 missense, 1 frameshift and 2 nonsense mutations, and review the relevant literature on all published mutations.
A novel type I OCA phenotype in which hypopigmentation is related to local body temperature is associated with a missense substitution in tyrosinase, codon 422 CGG (Arg)----CAG (Gln).
Taken together, these data show that OCAI soluble tyrosinase is an ER-associated degradation substrate that, unlike other albino tyrosinases, associates with calreticulin and BiP/GRP78.