| Literature DB >> 14635119 |
Ghislaine Royer1, Sylvain Hanein, Valérie Raclin, Nadine Gigarel, Jean-Michel Rozet, Arnold Munnich, Julie Steffann, Jean-Louis Dufier, Josseline Kaplan, Jean-Paul Bonnefont.
Abstract
Norrie disease is a rare X-inked recessive condition characterized by congenital blindness and occasionally deafness and mental retardation in males. This disease has been ascribed to mutations in the NDP gene on chromosome Xp11.1. Previous investigations of the NDP gene have identified largely sixty disease-causing sequence variants. Here, we report on ten different NDP gene allelic variants in fourteen of a series of 21 families fulfilling inclusion criteria. Two alterations were intragenic deletions and eight were nucleotide substitutions or splicing variants, six of them being hitherto unreported, namely c.112C>T (p.Arg38Cys), c.129C>G (p.His43Gln), c.133G>A (p.Val45Met), c.268C>T (p.Arg90Cys), c.382T>C (p.Cys128Arg), c.23479-1G>C (unknown). No NDP gene sequence variant was found in seven of the 21 families. This observation raises the issue of misdiagnosis, phenocopies, or existence of other X-linked or autosomal genes, the mutations of which would mimic the Norrie disease phenotype. Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14635119 DOI: 10.1002/humu.9204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878