Author:
Gonçalves Pedro Lisboa,Diniz Hugo,Tavares Isabel,Dória Sofia,Dong Juan,Kyriss McKenna,Fairbanks Lynette,Oliveira João Paulo
Abstract
Hereditary xanthinuria (HXAN) is a rare metabolic disorder that results from mutations in either the xanthine dehydrogenase (<i>XDH</i>) or the molybdenum cofactor sulfurase genes (<i>MOCOS</i>), respectively defining HXAN type I and type II. Hypouricemia, hypouricosuria, and abnormally high plasma and urine levels of xanthine, causing susceptibility to xanthine nephrolithiasis and deposition of xanthine crystals in tissues, are the metabolic hallmarks of HXAN. Several pathogenic variants in the <i>XDH</i> gene have so far been identified in patients with HXAN type I, but the clinical phenotype associated with the whole deletion of the human <i>XDH</i> gene is unknown. Herein, we report the case of a woman diagnosed with HXAN, whose molecular genetic testing revealed a homozygous microdeletion involving the <i>XDH</i> gene. Distinctive features of her medical history were the diagnosis of arterial hypertension and microalbuminuria at 22 years of age; a single pregnancy at the age of 25, complicated by proteinuria and transient kidney function deterioration in the third trimester; unexplained severe hypouricemia incidentally discovered during pregnancy; inability to breastfeed her newborn daughter due to primary agalactia; chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage 3 diagnosed at age 35; and progression to end-stage kidney disease over the next 12 years. Protocol noninvasive laboratory and imaging investigation was not informative as to the cause of CKD. This is the first description of the clinical phenotype associated with a natural knockout of the human <i>XDH</i> gene. Despite the lack of kidney histopathology data, the striking similarities with the phenotypes exhibited by comparable murine models validate the latter as useful sources of mechanistic insights for the pathogenesis of the human disease, supporting the hypothesis that the absence of xanthine dehydrogenase activity might represent a susceptibility factor for chronic tubulointerstitial nephritis, even in patients without kidney stones.
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