Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome (HPS) consists of ocu1ocutaneous albinism, a platelet storage-pool deficiency, and ceroid lipofuscinosis. In a recent report on the cloning of an HPS gene, all 22 Puerto Rican HPS patients were homozygous for a 16-bp duplication in exon 15. This presumably reflected a founder effect for the HPS mutation in Puerto Rico. Nevertheless, we ascertained two individuals from central Puerto Rico who lacked the 16-bp duplication, exhibited significant amounts of normal-size HPS mRNA by northern blot analysis, and had haplotypes in the HPS region that were different from the haplotype of every 16-bp-duplication patient. Moreover, these two individuals displayed no mutations in their CDNA sequences, throughout the entire HPS gene. Both patients exhibited pigment dilution, impaired visual acuity, nystagmus, a bleeding diathesis; and absent platelet dense bodies, confirming the diagnosis of HPS. These findings indicate that analysis of Puerto Rican patients for the 16-bp duplication in HPS cannot exclude the diagnosis of HPS. In addition, HPS most likely displays locus heterogeneity, consistent with the existence of several mouse strains manifesting both pigment dilution and a platelet storage-pool deficiency.
CITATION STYLE
Hazelwood, S., Shotelersuk, V., Wildenberg, S. C., Chen, D., Iwata, F., Kaiser-Kupfer, M. I., … Gahl, W. A. (1997). Evidence for locus heterogeneity in Puerto Ricans with Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome. American Journal of Human Genetics, 61(5), 1088–1094. https://doi.org/10.1086/301611
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