Chromosome 4q;10q translocations; comparison with different ethnic populations and FSHD patients

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Abstract

Background: Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by the weakness of facial, shoulder-girdle and upper arm muscles. Most patients with FSHD have fewer numbers of tandem repeated 3.3-kb KpnI units on chromosome 4q35. Chromosome 10q26 contains highly homologous KpnI repeats, and inter-chromosomal translocation has been reported. Methods: To clarify the influence on the deletion of the repeats, we surveyed three different ethnic populations and FSHD patients using the BglII/BlnI dosage test. Results: The frequency of translocation in 153 Japanese, 124 Korean, 114 Chinese healthy individuals and 56 Japanese 4q35-FSHD patients were 27.5%, 29.8%, 19.3%, and 32.1%, respectively. The ratio of '4 on 10' (trisomy and quatrosomy of chromosome 4) was higher than that of '10 on 4' (nullsomy and monosomy of chromosome 4) in all populations. Conclusions: The inter-chromosomal exchange was frequently observed in all four populations we examined, and no significant difference was observed between healthy and diseased groups. © 2002 Matsumura et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Matsumura, T., Goto, K., Yamanaka, G., Lee, J. H., Zhang, C., Hayashi, Y. K., & Arahata, K. (2002). Chromosome 4q;10q translocations; comparison with different ethnic populations and FSHD patients. BMC Neurology, 2. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2377-2-7

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