A locus for autosomal dominant mitral valve prolapse on chromosome 11p15.4

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Abstract

Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a common cardiovascular abnormality in the United States, occurring in ∼2.4% of the general population. Clinically, patients with MVP exhibit fibromyxomatous changes in one or both of the mitral leaflets that result in superior displacement of the leaflets into the left atrium. Although often clinically benign, MVP can be associated with important accompanying sequelae, including mitral regurgitation, bacterial endocarditis, congestive heart failure, atrial fibrillation, and even sudden death. MVP is genetically heterogeneous and is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait that exhibits both sex- and age-dependant penetrance. In this report, we describe the results of a genome scan and show that a locus for MVP maps to chromosome 11p15.4. Multipoint parametric analysis performed by use of GENEHUNTER gave a maximum LOD score of 3.12 for the chromosomal region immediately surrounding the four-marker haplotype D11S4124-D11S2349-D11S1338-D11S1323, and multipoint nonparametric analysis (NPL) confirms this finding (NPL = 38.59; P = .000397). Haplotype analysis across this region defines a 4.3-cM region between the markers D11S1923 and D11S1331 as the location of a new MVP locus, MMVP2, and confirms the genetic heterogeneity of this disorder. The discovery of genes involved in the pathogenesis of this common disease is crucial to understanding the marked variability in disease expression and mortality seen in MVP.

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Freed, L. A., Acierno, J. S., Dai, D., Leyne, M., Marshall, J. E., Nesta, F., … Slaugenhaupt, S. A. (2003). A locus for autosomal dominant mitral valve prolapse on chromosome 11p15.4. American Journal of Human Genetics, 72(6), 1551–1559. https://doi.org/10.1086/375452

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