A human homologue of the Drosophila melanogaster sluggish-A (proline oxidase) gene maps to 22q11.2, and is a candidate gene for type-I hyperprolinaemia
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Campbell, HD
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机构:UNIV ADELAIDE, QUEEN ELIZABETH HOSP, DEPT OBSTET & GYNAECOL, WOODVILLE, SA 5011, AUSTRALIA
Campbell, HD
Webb, GC
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机构:UNIV ADELAIDE, QUEEN ELIZABETH HOSP, DEPT OBSTET & GYNAECOL, WOODVILLE, SA 5011, AUSTRALIA
Webb, GC
Young, IG
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机构:UNIV ADELAIDE, QUEEN ELIZABETH HOSP, DEPT OBSTET & GYNAECOL, WOODVILLE, SA 5011, AUSTRALIA
Young, IG
机构:
[1] UNIV ADELAIDE, QUEEN ELIZABETH HOSP, DEPT OBSTET & GYNAECOL, WOODVILLE, SA 5011, AUSTRALIA
[2] AUSTRALIAN NATL UNIV, JOHN CURTIN SCH MED RES, DIV BIOCHEM & MOL BIOL, CANBERRA, ACT 2601, AUSTRALIA
We have cloned the complete coding region for a human homologue of the Drosophila melanogaster sluggish-A and yeast PUT1 genes, previously shown to encode proline oxidase activity in these organisms. The predicted 516-residue human protein shows strong homology (51% amino acid sequence identity) to the D. melanogaster-protein, indicating that this new human gene may encode proline oxidase. Northern analysis shows that the gene is expressed in human lung, skeletal muscle and brain, to a lesser extent in heart and kidney, and weakly in liver, placenta and pancreas. The gene was mapped by fluorescence in situ hybridization and by in situ hybridization with a [H-3]-labelled DNA probe to chromosome 22q11.2, a region previously implicated in type-I hyperprolinaemia in a case of CATCH 22 syndrome, a contiguous gene deletion syndrome involving 22q11. Taken together, the evidence indicates that this new human gene is a good candidate gene for type-I hyperprolinaemia. In view of the neurological phenotype of the D. melanogaster sluggish-A mutant, it is of interest that schizophrenia and bipolar disorder susceptibility genes also map in this region.