Disruption of the ATP8A2 gene in a patient with a t(10;13) de novo balanced translocation and a severe neurological phenotype |
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Authors: | Pierre Cacciagli Marie-Reine Haddad Cécile Mignon-Ravix Bilal El-Waly Anne Moncla Chantal Missirian Brigitte Chabrol Laurent Villard |
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Affiliation: | 1.Département de Génétique Médicale, Hôpital d''Enfants de La Timone, Marseille, France;2.Inserm, UMR_S 910, Faculté de Médecine, Marseille, France;3.Université de la Méditerranée, Marseille, France;4.Département de Neurologie Pédiatrique, Hôpital d''Enfants de La Timone, Marseille, France |
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Abstract: | Mental retardation is a frequent condition that is clinically and genetically highly heterogeneous. One of the strategies used to identify new causative genes is to take advantage of balanced chromosomal rearrangements in affected patients. We characterized a de novo t(10;13) balanced translocation in a patient with severe mental retardation and major hypotonia. We found that the balanced translocation is molecularly balanced. The translocation breakpoint disrupts the coding sequence of a single gene, called ATP8A2. The ATP8A2 gene is not ubiquitously expressed, but it is highly expressed in the brain. In situ hybridization performed in mouse embryos at different stages of development with the mouse homologue confirms this observation. A total of 38 patients with a similar phenotype were screened for mutations in the ATP8A2 gene but no mutations were found. The balanced translocation identified in this patient disrupts a single candidate gene highly expressed in the brain. Although this chromosomal rearrangement could be the cause of the severe phenotype of the patient, we were not able to identify additional cases. Extensive screening in the mentally retarded population will be needed to determine if ATP8A2 haploinsufficiency or dysfunction causes a neurological phenotype in humans. |
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Keywords: | chromosome aberrations mental retardation Atp8a2 10p12 13q12 |
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