[PDF][PDF] Homozygous mutations in IHH cause acrocapitofemoral dysplasia, an autosomal recessive disorder with cone-shaped epiphyses in hands and hips

J Hellemans, PJ Coucke, A Giedion… - The American Journal of …, 2003 - cell.com
J Hellemans, PJ Coucke, A Giedion, A De Paepe, P Kramer, F Beemer, GR Mortier
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2003cell.com
Acrocapitofemoral dysplasia is a recently delineated autosomal recessive skeletal
dysplasia, characterized clinically by short stature with short limbs and radiographically by
cone-shaped epiphyses, mainly in hands and hips. Genomewide homozygosity mapping in
two consanguineous families linked the locus to 2q35-q36 with a maximum two-point LOD
score of 8.02 at marker D2S2248. Two recombination events defined the minimal critical
region between markers D2S2248 and D2S2151 (3.74 cM). Using a candidate-gene …
Acrocapitofemoral dysplasia is a recently delineated autosomal recessive skeletal dysplasia, characterized clinically by short stature with short limbs and radiographically by cone-shaped epiphyses, mainly in hands and hips. Genomewide homozygosity mapping in two consanguineous families linked the locus to 2q35-q36 with a maximum two-point LOD score of 8.02 at marker D2S2248. Two recombination events defined the minimal critical region between markers D2S2248 and D2S2151 (3.74 cM). Using a candidate-gene approach, we identified two missense mutations in the amino-terminal signaling domain of the gene encoding Indian hedgehog (IHH). Both affected individuals of family 1 are homozygous for a 137C→T transition (P46L), and the three patients in family 2 are homozygous for a 569T→C transition (V190A). The two mutant amino acids are strongly conserved and predicted to be located outside the region where brachydactyly type A-1 mutations are clustered.
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