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A combined analysis of D22S278 marker alleles in affected sib-pairs: Support for a susceptibility locus for schizophrenia at chromosome 22q12
Authors
M Ackenheil
M Albus
+64 more
S Antonarakis
D Blackwood
S BodeauPean
J Brynjolfsson
W Byerley
D Campion
D Collier
H Coon
T Crow
RR Crowe
D Curtis
T dAmato
L DeLisi
H DonisKeller
RP Ebstein
R Freedman
E Gershon
M Gill
L Golden
H Gurling
J Hallmayer
NK Hayward
L He
P Holmans
D Housman
HG Hwu
M Jay
G Kalsi
H Kazazian
KS Kendler
H Kristbjarnason
C Laurent
B Lerer
DF Levinson
XH Liu
R Lofthouse
CJ MacLean
S Maguire
W Maier
J Mallet
P McGuffin
HW Moises
BJ Mowry
W Muir
R Murray
DJ Nancarrow
S Nanko
G Nestadt
M Owen
H Petursson
M Polymeropoulos
AE Pulver
CM Read
P Sham
T Sigmundson
JM Silverman
D StClair
RE Straub
L Tao
H Vallada
D Walsh
C Wiese
DB Wildenauer
L Yang
Publication date
1 January 1996
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Abstract
Recently, unstable trinucleotide repeats have been shown to be the etiologic factor in seven neuropsychiatric diseases, and they may play a similar role in other genetic disorders which exhibit genetic anticipation. We have tested one polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based and two hybridization-based methods for direct detection of unstable DNA expansion in genomic DNA. This technique employs a single primer (asymmetric) PCR using total genomic DNA as a template to efficiently screen for the presence of large trinucleotide repeat expansions. High-stringency Southern blot hybridization with a PCR-generated trinucleotide repeat probe allowed detection of the DNA fragment containing the expansion. Analysis of myotonic dystrophy patients containing different degrees of (CTG)n expansion demonstrated the identification of the site of trinucleotide instability in some affected individuals without any prior information regarding genetic map location. The same probe was used for fluorescent in situ hybridization and several regions of (CTG)n/(CAG)n repeats in the human genome were detected, including the myotonic dystrophy locus on chromosome 19q. Although limited at present to large trinucleotide repeat expansions, these strategies can be applied to directly clone genes involved in disorders caused by large expansions of unstable DNA. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
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