Split hand foot malformation is associated with a reduced level of Dactylin gene expression

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Abstract

Split hand foot malformation (SHFM) is a congenital limb malformation presenting with a median cleft of the hand and/or foot, syndactyly and polydactyly. SHFM is genetically heterogeneous with four loci mapped to date. Murine Dactylaplasia (Dac) is phenotypically similar, and it has been mapped to a syntenic region of 10q24, where SHFM3 has been localized. Structural alterations of the gene-encoding dactylin, a constituent of the ubiquitinization pathway, leading to reduced levels of transcript have been identified in Dac. Here, we report a significant decrease of Dactylin transcript in several individuals affected by SHFM. This observation supports a central role for dactylin in the pathogenesis of SHFM.

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Basel, D., DePaepe, A., Kilpatrick, M. W., & Tsipouras, P. (2003). Split hand foot malformation is associated with a reduced level of Dactylin gene expression. Clinical Genetics, 64(4), 350–354. https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1399-0004.2003.00153.x

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