Paternal uniparental disomy for chromosome 1 revealed by molecular analysis of a patient with pycnodysostosis

被引:56
作者
Gelb, BD
Willner, JP
Dunn, TM
Kardon, NB
Verloes, A
Poncin, J
Desnick, RJ
机构
[1] CUNY Mt Sinai Sch Med, Dept Pediat, New York, NY 10029 USA
[2] CUNY Mt Sinai Sch Med, Dept Human Genet, New York, NY 10029 USA
[3] Walloon Univ Ctr Human Genet, Liege, Belgium
关键词
D O I
10.1086/301795
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Molecular analysis of a patient affected by the autosomal recessive skeletal dysplasia, pycnodysostosis (cathepsin K deficiency; MIM 265 800), revealed homozygosity for a novel missense mutation (A277V). Since the A277V mutation was carried by the patient's father but not by his mother, who had two normal cathepsin K alleles, paternal uniparental disomy was suspected. Karyotyping of the patient and of both parents was normal, and high-resolution cytogenetic analyses of chromosome 1, to which cathepsin K is mapped, revealed no abnormalities. Evaluation of polymorphic DNA markers spanning chromosome 1 demonstrated that the patient had inherited two paternal chromosome 1 homologues, whereas alleles for markers from other chromosomes were inherited in a Mendelian fashion. The patient was homoallelic for informative markers mapping near the chromosome 1 centromere, but he was heteroallelic for markers near both telomeres, establishing that the paternal uniparental disomy with partial isodisomy was caused by a meiosis II nondisjunction event. Phenotypically, the patient had normal birth height and weight, had normal psychomotor development at age 7 years, and had only the usual features of pycnodysostosis. This patient represents the first case of paternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 1 and provides conclusive evidence that paternally derived genes on human chromosome 1 are not imprinted.
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页码:848 / 854
页数:7
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