Balanced reciprocal translocations associated with genetic disorders have facilitated the identification of a variety of genes for early-onset monogenic disorders, but only rarely the genes associated with common and complex disorders. To assess the potential of chromosomal breakpoints associated with common/complex disorders, we investigated the full spectrum of diseases in 731 carriers of balanced reciprocal translocations without known early-onset disorders in a nation-wide questionnaire-based re-examination. In 42 families, one of the breakpoints at the cytogenetic level concurred with known linkage data and/or the translocation co-segregated with the reported phenotype, for example, we found a significant linkage (lod score = 2.1) of dyslexia and a co-segregating translocation with a breakpoint in a previously confirmed locus for dyslexia. Furthermore, we identified 441 instances of at least two unrelated carriers with concordant breakpoints and traits. If applied to other populations, re-examination of translocation carriers may identify additional genotype-phenotype associations, some of which may be novel and others that may coincide with and provide additional support of data presented here. © 2006 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Bache, I., Hjorth, M., Bugge, M., Holstebroe, S., Hilden, J., Schmidt, L., … Tommerup, N. (2006). Systematic re-examination of carriers of balanced reciprocal translocations: A strategy to search for candidate regions for common and complex diseases. European Journal of Human Genetics, 14(4), 410–417. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201592
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