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Ethnically diverse causes of Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS):FCMDmutations are a more common cause of WWS outside of the Middle East

Authors :
Patricia Galvin-Parton
Christopher A. Walsh
Sophie Currier
Lawrence R. Shapiro
Mohamed Z. Seidahmed
William B. Dobyns
R. Sean Hill
Lina Basel-Vanagaite
Annapurna Poduri
Brenda J. Barry
M. Chiara Manzini
Karen L. Schmidt
Jennifer N. Partlow
Bernard S. Chang
Mustafa A. Salih
Jessica G. Davis
Danielle Gleason
Source :
Human Mutation. 29:E231-E241
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2008.

Abstract

Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is a genetically heterogeneous autosomal recessive disease characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy, cobblestone lissencephaly, and ocular malformations. Mutations in six genes involved in the glycosylation of á-dystroglycan (POMT1, POMT2, POMGNT1, FCMD, FKRP and LARGE) have been identified in WWS patients, but account for only a portion of WWS cases. To better understand the genetics of WWS and establish the frequency and distribution of mutations across WWS genes, we genotyped all known loci in a cohort of 43 WWS patients of varying geographical and ethnic origin. Surprisingly, we reached a molecular diagnosis for 40% of our patients and found mutations in POMT1, POMT2, FCMD and FKRP, many of which were novel alleles, but no mutations in POMGNT1 or LARGE. Notably, the FCMD gene was a more common cause of WWS than previously expected in the European/American subset of our cohort, including all Ashkenazi Jewish cases, who carried the same founder mutation.

Details

ISSN :
10981004 and 10597794
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f324329025eaba67d8d39bebe28f67a7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.20844