Crouzon syndrome (MIM 123500) is a common autosomal dominant form of craniosynostosis with shallow orbits, ocular proptosis, and maxillary hypoplasia. Jackson-Weiss syndrome (MIM 123150) is another autosomal dominant craniosynostosis with highly variable phenotypic expression. Unlike Crouzon syndrome, Jackson-Weiss syndrome is associated with foot anomalies. We performed two point linkage and haplotype analyses using 13 dinucleotide repeat markers on chromosome 10, spanning a genetic distance of 108 cM. The Crouzon syndrome locus (CFD1) maps to the region of chromosome 10q2, with the tightest linkage to locus D10S205 (Z = 3.09, Õ = 0.00). The Jackson-Weiss syndrome locus in the large Amish pedigree in which the condition was originally described was also linked to the chromosome 10q23-q26 region between loci D10S190 and D10S186. The D10S209 locus was most strongly linked (Z = 11.29, Õ = 0.00). © 1994 Academic Press Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Li, X., Lewanda, A. F., Eluma, F., Jerald, H., Choi, H., Alozie, I., … Jabs, E. W. (1994). Two craniosynostotic syndrome loci, crouzon and jackson-weiss, map to chromosome 10q23-q26. Genomics, 22(2), 418–424. https://doi.org/10.1006/geno.1994.1403
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