Nomenclature for alleles of the thiopurine methyltransferase gene
Author(s) -
Malin L. Appell,
J. M. Berg,
John A. Duley,
William E. Evans,
Martin A. Kennedy,
Lynne Lennard,
Tony Marinaki,
Howard L. McLeod,
Mary V. Relling,
Elke Schaeffeler,
Matthias Schwab,
Richard M. Weinshilboum,
Allen Eng Juh Yeoh,
Ellen M. McDonagh,
Joan M. Hebert,
Teri E. Klein,
Sally A. Coulthard
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pharmacogenetics and genomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.579
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1744-6880
pISSN - 1744-6872
DOI - 10.1097/fpc.0b013e32835f1cc0
Subject(s) - thiopurine methyltransferase , pharmacogenomics , azathioprine , gene nomenclature , genetics , allele , computational biology , biology , pharmacogenetics , gene , medicine , bioinformatics , nomenclature , genotype , taxonomy (biology) , botany , disease
The drug-metabolizing enzyme thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) has become one of the best examples of pharmacogenomics to be translated into routine clinical practice. TPMT metabolizes the thiopurines 6-mercaptopurine, 6-thioguanine, and azathioprine, drugs that are widely used for treatment of acute leukemias, inflammatory bowel diseases, and other disorders of immune regulation. Since the discovery of genetic polymorphisms in the TPMT gene, many sequence variants that cause a decreased enzyme activity have been identified and characterized. Increasingly, to optimize dose, pretreatment determination of TPMT status before commencing thiopurine therapy is now routine in many countries. Novel TPMT sequence variants are currently numbered sequentially using PubMed as a source of information; however, this has caused some problems as exemplified by two instances in which authors' articles appeared on PubMed at the same time, resulting in the same allele numbers given to different polymorphisms. Hence, there is an urgent need to establish an order and consensus to the numbering of known and novel TPMT sequence variants. To address this problem, a TPMT nomenclature committee was formed in 2010, to define the nomenclature and numbering of novel variants for the TPMT gene. A website (http://www.imh.liu.se/tpmtalleles) serves as a platform for this work. Researchers are encouraged to submit novel TPMT alleles to the committee for designation and reservation of unique allele numbers. The committee has decided to renumber two alleles: nucleotide position 106 (G>A) from TPMT*24 to TPMT*30 and position 611 (T>C, rs79901429) from TPMT*28 to TPMT*31. Nomenclature for all other known alleles remains unchanged.
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