Localization of a recessive gene for North American Indian childhood cirrhosis to chromosome region 16q22 - And identification of a shared haplotype

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Abstract

North American Indian childhood cirrhosis (NAIC, or CIRH1A) is an isolated nonsyndromic form of familial cholestasis reported in Ojibway-Cree children and young adults in northwestern Quebec. The pattern of transmission is consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. To map the NAIC locus, we performed a genomewide scan on three DNA pools of samples from 13 patients, 16 unaffected siblings, and 22 parents from five families. Analysis of 333 highly polymorphic markers revealed 3 markers with apparent excess allele sharing among affected individuals. Additional mapping identified a chromosome 16q segment shared by all affected individuals. When the program FASTLINK/LINKAGE was used and a completely penetrant autosomal recessive mode of inheritance was assumed, a maximum LOD score of 4.44 was observed for a recombination fraction of 0, with marker D16S3067. A five- marker haplotype (D16S3067, D16S752, D16S2624, D16S3025, and D16S3106) spanning 4.9 cM was shared by all patients. These results provide significant evidence of linkage for a candidate gene on chromosome 16q22.

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Bétard, C., Rasquin-Weber, A., Brewer, C., Drouin, E., Clark, S., Verner, A., … Mitchell, G. A. (2000). Localization of a recessive gene for North American Indian childhood cirrhosis to chromosome region 16q22 - And identification of a shared haplotype. American Journal of Human Genetics, 67(1), 222–228. https://doi.org/10.1086/302993

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