Copyright © 2008 The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.
The American Journal of Human Genetics, Volume 82, Issue 4, 916-926, 28 March 2008
doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.02.007
Article
J.A. Fantes1, 9, E. Boland2, 9, J. Ramsay1, D. Donnai2, M. Splitt3, J.A. Goodship3, H. Stewart4, M. Whiteford5, P. Gautier1, L. Harewood1, 6, S. Holloway7, F. Sharkey1, 8, E. Maher8, V. van Heyningen1, J. Clayton-Smith2, D.R. Fitzpatrick1,
,
and G.C.M. Black2
1 Medical and Developmental Genetics Section, Medical Research Council (MRC) Human Genetics Unit, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Scotland, UK
2 Department of Clinical Genetics, Central Manchester and Manchester Children's University Hospitals NHS Trust, St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester M13 0JH, UK
3 Institute of Human Genetics, International Centre for Life, Central Parkway, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 3BZ, UK
4 Department of Medical Genetics, Churchill Hospital, Old Road, Headington, Oxford, UK
5 Clinical Genetics Department, Yorkhill Hospital, Glasgow G3 8SJ, Scotland, UK
6 Université de Lausanne, Centre Intégratif de Génomique (CIG), CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
7 South East Scotland Clinical Genetics Services, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Scotland, UK
8 Regional Cytogenetics Laboratory, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, Scotland, UK
Corresponding authorAbstract
We report fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) mapping of 152, mostly de novo, apparently balanced chromosomal rearrangement (ABCR) breakpoints in 76 individuals, 30 of whom had no obvious phenotypic abnormality (control group) and 46 of whom had an associated disease (case group). The aim of this study was to identify breakpoint characteristics that could discriminate between these groups and which might be of predictive value in de novo ABCR (DN-ABCR) cases detected antenatally. We found no difference in the proportion of breakpoints that interrupted a gene, although in three cases, direct interruption or deletion of known autosomal-dominant or X-linked recessive Mendelian disease genes was diagnostic. The only significant predictor of phenotypic abnormality in the group as a whole was the localization of one or both breakpoints to an R-positive (G-negative) band with estimated predictive values of 0.69 (95% CL 0.54–0.81) and 0.90 (95% CL 0.60–0.98), respectively. R-positive bands are known to contain more genes and have a higher guanine-cytosine (GC) content than do G-positive (R-negative) bands; however, whether a gene was interrupted by the breakpoint or the GC content in the 200kB around the breakpoint had no discriminant ability. Our results suggest that the large-scale genomic context of the breakpoint has prognostic utility and that the pathological mechanism of mapping to an R-band cannot be accounted for by direct gene inactivation.
| Myotonic Dystrophy Type 2: Human Founder Haplotype and Evolutionary Conservation of the Repeat Tract The American Journal of Human Genetics, Volume 73, Issue 4, 1 October 2003, Pages 849-862 Christina L. Liquori, Yoshio Ikeda, Marcy Weatherspoon, Kenneth Ricker, Benedikt G.H. Schoser, Joline C. Dalton, John W. Day and Laura P.W. Ranum Abstract Myotonic dystrophy (DM), the most common form of muscular dystrophy in adults, can be caused by a mutation on either chromosome 19 (DM1) or 3 (DM2). In 2001, we demonstrated that DM2 is caused by a CCTG expansion in intron 1 of the zinc finger protein 9 (ZNF9) gene. To investigate the ancestral origins of the DM2 expansion, we compared haplotypes for 71 families with genetically confirmed DM2, using 19 short tandem repeat markers that we developed that flank the repeat tract. All of the families are white, with the majority of Northern European/German descent and a single family from Afghanistan. Several conserved haplotypes spanning >700 kb appear to converge into a single haplotype near the repeat tract. The common interval that is shared by all families with DM2 immediately flanks the repeat, extending up to 216 kb telomeric and 119 kb centromeric of the CCTG expansion. The DM2 repeat tract contains the complex repeat motif (TG)n(TCTG)n(CCTG)n. The CCTG portion of the repeat tract is interrupted on normal alleles, but, as in other expansion disorders, these interruptions are lost on affected alleles. We examined haplotypes of 228 control chromosomes and identified a potential premutation allele with an uninterrupted (CCTG)20 on a haplotype that was identical to the most common affected haplotype. Our data suggest that the predominant Northern European ancestry of families with DM2 resulted from a common founder and that the loss of interruptions within the CCTG portion of the repeat tract may predispose alleles to further expansion. To gain insight into possible function of the repeat tract, we looked for evolutionary conservation. The complex repeat motif and flanking sequences within intron 1 are conserved among human, chimpanzee, gorilla, mouse, and rat, suggesting a conserved biological function. Abstract | | |
| The ABCA4 Gene in Autosomal Recessive Cone-Rod Dystrophies The American Journal of Human Genetics, Volume 71, Issue 6, 1 December 2002, Pages 1480-1482 Dominique Ducroq, Jean-Michel Rozet, Sylvie Gerber, Isabelle Perrault, Fabienne Barbet, Sylvain Hanein, Selim Hakiki, Jean-Louis Dufier, Arnold Munnich, Christian Hamel and Josseline Kaplan | |