Triple a Syndrome—Clinical Aspects and Molecular Genetics

The triple A syndrome or Allgrove syndrome (MIM*231550) is characterized by adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) resistant Adrenal insufficiency, Achalasia of the cardia and Alacrima. In addition to the main features, patients frequently suffer from neurological disturbances. Dermatological abnormalities such as palmoplantar hyperkeratosis as well as other signs like short stature, microcephaly and osteoporosis point to the multisystemic character of the disorder. The molecular defect of the autosomal recessively inherited triple A syndrome is not known. We initially performed a systematic genome linkage scan in eight triple A families and were able to map the syndrome to a 6 cM interval on human chromosome 12q13 near the type II keratin gene cluster. A refinement of the triple A critical region was achieved by detailed haplotype analysis in a further 37 families from different ethnic backgrounds. There was no indication of genetic heterogeneity. The achalasia-alacrima (AA) syndrome which has been defined as a distinct clinical entity (MIM 200440) is most likely a variant of the triple A syndrome as shown by haplotype analysis in three AA families. We constructed a high-resolution BAC/PAC-based transcript map of the region which will greatly facilitate the identification of the triple A syndrome gene. The considerable intra- and interfamilial variability of the severity of the disorder implies a variable expression of an impaired pleiotropically acting gene.