Background And Purpose: In previous studies of familial intracranial aneurysm (IA), parametric linkage analyses have been undertaken for five unrelated families, four providing maximum logarithm of odds (LOD) scores with dominant models and one with a recessive model. Each family was linked to a distinct locus, indicating locus heterogeneity. This study aimed to examine whether Japanese IA families consistent with autosomal-dominant mode of inheritance support linkage to these loci.
Methods: We performed genomewide linkage analysis using the GENEHUNTER program. Affected-only parametric linkage analysis was used for 41 affected members in nine unrelated IA families with dominant models, which were selected from 29 families used for a nonparametric (model-free) linkage analysis in our previous study.
Results: We failed to support the linkage to previously reported autosomal-dominant loci. Instead, we found linkage to chromosome 19q13.3 with a maximum multipoint LOD score of 4.10. The LOD-1 interval (regions with LOD scores of >1) was 8.0 cM between D19S198 and D19S902.
Conclusions: A genomewide scan for IA families with dominant models in Japan confirmed the locus at chromosome 19q13.3, which has also been reported as a candidate locus in a Finnish population.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.STR.0000259657.73682.03 | DOI Listing |
By Southern analysis of human-rodent-somatic cell hybrids, the C3 gene could be excluded from the distal portion of the long arm of chromosome 19. In this study, a cloned genomic DNA fragment of the human C3 gene was employed as hybridisation probe. Since C3 is linked with the myotonic dystrophy (DM) and the Lewis (Le) locus, this exclusion may be relevant too for the regional assignment of these and other genes of the large chromosome 19 linkage group.
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February 1979
Trisomy for the distal third of the long arm of chromosome 19 was observed in a 12-year-old boy and his 9-year-old sister. Both are affected by extremely severe statural and psychomotor retardation. The physical symptoms common to both are dwarfism, micro- and brachycephaly, antimongoloid slant of the eyes, hypertelorism, ptosis, short nose, short philtrum, poorly formed ears, short neck with excess skin, barrel-shaped thorax, diastasis of rectus muscles, kyphosis, sacral dimple, excess of digital arches, pedes valgi, laterally curved big toes, epilepsy and muscular hypotonia.
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