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1.
Hum Mol Genet ; 8(1): 129-35, 1999 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9887341

ABSTRACT

Angelman syndrome (AS) is characterized by mental retardation, absence of speech, seizures and motor dysfunction. AS is caused by maternal deletions for chromosome 15q11-q13, paternal uniparental disomy (UPD), imprinting defects or loss-of-function mutations in the UBE3A locus which encodes E6-AP ubiquitin-protein ligase. The UBE3A gene is imprinted with paternal silencing in human brain and similar silencing of the Ube3a locus in Purkinje cells and hippocampal neurons in the mouse. We have sequenced the major coding exons for UBE3A in 56 index patients with a clinical diagnosis of AS and a normal DNA methylation pattern. The analysis identified disease-causing mutations in 17 of 56 patients (30%) including 13 truncating mutations, two missense mutations, one single amino acid deletion and one stop codon mutation predicting an elongated protein. Mutations were identified in six of eight families (75%) with more than one affected case, and in 11 of 47 isolated cases (23%); no mutation was found in one family with two siblings, one with a typical and one with an atypical phenotype. Mutations were de novo in nine of the 11 isolated cases. An amino acid polymorphism of threonine substituted for alanine at codon 178 was identified, and a 3 bp length polymorphism was found in the intron upstream of exon 8. In all informative cases, phenotypic expression was consistent with imprinting with a normal phenotype when a mutation was on the paternal chromosome and an AS phenotype when a mutation was on the maternal chromosome. Laboratory diagnosis and genetic counseling for AS are complex, and mutation analysis is valuable in clinically typical AS patients with a normal methylation analysis.


Subject(s)
Angelman Syndrome/enzymology , Angelman Syndrome/genetics , Ligases/genetics , Mutation , Animals , Base Sequence , DNA Mutational Analysis , DNA Primers/genetics , Exons , Female , Genetic Counseling , Genetic Variation , Genomic Imprinting , Humans , Male , Mice , Pedigree , Phenotype , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
2.
Neurology ; 51(4): 1081-6, 1998 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9781533

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To screen for the SCA-7 mutation in autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA) families and study genotype/phenotype correlations. BACKGROUND: The association of cerebellar ataxia and progressive pigmentary macular dystrophy clinically defines a distinct form of ADCA classified as SCA-7. SCA-7 is caused by expansion of a highly unstable CAG repeat that lies in the coding region of a novel gene on chromosome 3p12-13. METHODS: We screened 51 ADCA kindreds, in which SCA-1, SCA-2, SCA-3, and SCA6 mutations had been excluded, for the SCA-7 mutation using primers that specifically amplify the SCA-7 CAG repeat. RESULTS: The SCA-7 mutation was identified in 10 independent families. Normal alleles ranged from 7 to 16 repeats; expanded alleles ranged from 41 to 306 repeats. One allele with 36 repeats was found in an asymptomatic individual carrying an at-risk haplotype. SCA-7 presents a wide spectrum of clinical features including visual loss, dementia, hypoacusia, severe hypotonia, and auditory hallucinations. Juvenile SCA-7 occurs on maternal and paternal transmission of the mutation, whereas the infantile form occurs only on paternal transmission. An infant of African American descent carried the largest SCA-7 expansion (306 CAG repeats) and had severe hypotonia, congestive heart failure, patent ductus arteriosus, cerebral and cerebellar atrophy, and visual loss. CONCLUSION: These data show a wide spectrum of phenotypic abnormalities in SCA-7 and define an infantile phenotype caused by the largest CAG repeat expansion described to date.


Subject(s)
Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Spinocerebellar Degenerations/genetics , Trinucleotide Repeats , Adolescent , Adult , Age of Onset , Alleles , Ataxin-7 , DNA Mutational Analysis , Family Health , Genotype , Humans , Infant , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Pedigree , Phenotype , Spinocerebellar Degenerations/diagnosis
3.
Nat Genet ; 15(1): 74-7, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8988172

ABSTRACT

Angelman syndrome (AS) is associated with maternal deletions of human chromosome 15q11-q13 and with paternal uniparental disomy for this region indicating that deficiency of an imprinted, maternally expressed gene within the critical interval is the likely cause of the syndrome. Although the gene for E6-AP ubiquitin-protein ligase (UBE3A) was mapped to the critical region for AS, evidence of expression from both parental alleles initially suggested that it was an unlikely candidate gene for this disorder. Because attempts to identify any novel maternally expressed transcripts were unsuccessful and because the UBE3A gene remained within a narrowed AS critical region, we searched for mutations in UBE3A in 11 AS patients without known molecular defects (large deletion, uniparental disomy, or imprinting mutation). This analysis tested the possibility that deficiency of an undefined, maternally expressed transcript or isoform of the UBE3A gene could cause AS. Four mutations were identified including a de novo frameshift mutation and a de novo nonsense mutation in exon 3 and two missense mutations of less certain significance. The de novo truncating mutations indicate that UBE3A is the AS gene and suggest the possibility of a maternally expressed gene product in addition to the biallelically expressed transcript. Intragenic mutation of UBE3A in AS is the first example of a genetic disorder of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic pathway in mammals. It may represent an example of a human genetic disorder associated with a locus producing functionally distinct imprinted and biallelically expressed gene products.


Subject(s)
Angelman Syndrome/genetics , Ligases/genetics , Mutation , Chromosome Mapping , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 15 , Cloning, Molecular , DNA Mutational Analysis , DNA, Complementary , Female , Frameshift Mutation , Genomic Imprinting , Humans , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Deletion , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases , Ubiquitins/metabolism
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