Refined genetic mapping of autosomal recessive chronic distal muscular atrophy to chromosome 11q13.3 and evidence of linkage disequilibrium in European families

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Abstract

Chronic distal spinal muscular atrophy (Chronic DSMA, MIM *607088) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a progressive motor weakness and muscular atrophy, predominating in the distal parts of the limbs. A form of Chronic DSMA gene has been previously mapped to chromosome 11q13 in the 10.3 cM interval defined by loci D11S1889 and D11S1321. By linkage analysis in 12 European Chronic DSMA families, we showed that a disease gene maps to chromosome 11q13.3 (Zmax=6.66 at θ=0.00 at the DSM4 locus) and suggested that this condition is genetically homogeneous. Recombination events allowed us to reduce the genetic interval to a 2.6 cM region, telomeric to the IGHMBP2 gene, excluding this gene as the disease causing gene in Chronic DSMA. Moreover, partial linkage disequilibrium was found between three rare alleles at loci D11S1369, DSM4 and D11S4184 and the mutant chromosome in European patients. Analysis of the markers at these loci strongly suggests that most Chronic DSMA © 2004 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved.

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Viollet, L., Zarhrate, M., Maystadt, I., Estournet-Mathiaut, B., Barios, A., Desguerre, I., … Munnich, A. (2004). Refined genetic mapping of autosomal recessive chronic distal muscular atrophy to chromosome 11q13.3 and evidence of linkage disequilibrium in European families. European Journal of Human Genetics, 12(6), 483–488. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201177

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