24 research outputs found

    Familial infantile convulsions and paroxysmal choreoathetosis: a new neurological syndrome linked to the pericentromeric region of human chromosome 16.

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    Benign infantile familial convulsions is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by nonfebrile seizures, with the first attack occurring at age 3-12 mo. It is one of the rare forms of epilepsy that are inherited as monogenic Mendelian traits, thus providing a powerful tool for mapping genes involved in epileptic syndromes. Paroxysmal choreoathetosis is an involuntary-movement disorder characterized by attacks that occur spontaneously or are induced by a variety of stimuli. Classification is still elusive, and the epileptic nature of this movement disorder has long been discussed and remains controversial. We have studied four families from northwestern France in which benign infantile convulsions was inherited as an autosomal dominant trait together with variably expressed paroxysmal choreoathetosis. The human genome was screened with microsatellite markers regularly spaced, and strong evidence of linkage for the disease gene was obtained in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 16, with a maximum two-point LOD score, for D16S3133, of 6.76 at a recombination fraction of 0. Critical recombinants narrowed the region of interest to a 10-cM interval around the centromere. Our study provides the first genetic evidence for a common basis of convulsive and choreoathetotic disorders and will help in the understanding and classification of paroxysmal neurological syndromes

    Confirmation and refinement of the genetic localization of the Coffin-Lowry syndrome locus in Xp22.1-p22.2

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    The Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS) is an X-linked inherited disease of unknown pathogenesis characterized by severe mental retardation, typical facial and digital anomalies, and progressive skeletal deformations. Our previous linkage analysis, based on four pedigrees with the disease, suggested a localization for the CLS locus in Xp22.1–p22.2, with the most likely position between the marker loci DXS41 and DXS43. We have now extended the study to 16 families by using seven RFLP marker loci spanning the Xp22.1–p22.2 region. Linkage has been established with five markers from this part of the X chromosome: DXS274 (lod score [Z] (θ) = 3.53 at θ = .08), DXS43 (Z(θ) = 3.16 at θ = .08), DXS197 (Z(θ) = 3.03 at θ = .05), DXS41 (Z(θ) = 2.89 at θ = .08), and DXS207 (Z(θ) = 2.73 at θ = .13). A multipoint linkage analysis further placed, with a maximum multipoint Z of 7.30, the mutation-causing CLS within a 7-cM interval defined by the cluster of tightly linked markers (DXS207-DXS43-DXS197) on the distal side and by DXS274 on the proximal side. Thus, these further linkage data confirm and refine the map location for the gene responsible for CLS in Xp22.1–p22.2. As no linkage heterogeneity was detected, this validates the use of the Xp22.1–p22.2 markers for carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis in CLS families
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