| Literature DB >> 19368708 |
Jean-Pierre Bayley1, Anneliese E M Grimbergen, Patrick A van Bunderen, Michiel van der Wielen, Henricus P Kunst, Jacques W Lenders, Jeroen C Jansen, Robin P F Dullaart, Peter Devilee, Eleonora P Corssmit, Annette H Vriends, Monique Losekoot, Marjan M Weiss.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Germline mutations of the tumor suppressor genes SDHB, SDHC and SDHD play a major role in hereditary paraganglioma and pheochromocytoma. These three genes encode subunits of succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme and complex II component of the electron transport chain. The majority of variants of the SDH genes are missense and nonsense mutations. To date few large deletions of the SDH genes have been described.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19368708 PMCID: PMC2670821 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-10-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Name and physical location of chromosome 1 microsatellite markers and intragenic SNPs used for haplotyping
| Marker name (in chromosomal order) | Chromosomal location (UCSC Genome Browser. Human Mar. 2006 Assembly) |
| D1S436 | 15643044 |
| D1S2697 | 16192037 |
| D1S170 | 17070023 |
| rs12045097 | 17218463 |
| rs2871775 | 17218491 |
| rs978528 | 17222384 |
| rs2235931 | 17222541 |
| rs2235930 | 17222729 |
| rs2647162 | 17222829 |
| rs12142244 | 17223517 |
| rs2235929 | 17223682 |
| rs7550829 | 17230163 |
| rs2746467 | 17230201 |
| rs11577071 | 17231760 |
| rs4920390 | 17231880 |
| rs10887990 | 17231972 |
| rs11203284 | 17242538 |
| rs11203285 | 17242706 |
| rs10887992 | 17242799 |
| rs10887993 | 17242827 |
| c.200+987C>T | |
| rs11203287 | 17244983 |
| rs9435747 | 17245053 |
| rs11582579 | 17245097 |
| rs6690934 | 17245208 |
| rs7536679 | 17247249 |
| rs7545499 | 17247274 |
| rs7545518 | 17247328 |
| D1S3669 | 17556185 |
| D1S2826 | 18205820 |
| D1S2644 | 18799054 |
Figure 1An example of MLPA analysis of the . Only some exons of each gene can be seen in this view but all are included in the kit (P226 MLPA kit), plus the promoters of each gene, and several control fragments located on various chromosomes. Red peaks show the average of normal control DNA and blue peaks represent the DNA of the patient. The deletion of exon 3 of SDHB can clearly be seen (small red diamond).
Figure 2Long range PCR of the exon 3 region of . Lanes 1 & 3. Patients carrying deletions showed an anomalous fragment of ~9 kb. Lanes 2 & 4. Two healthy controls lack the anomalous ~9 kb fragment. The normal fragment (~16 kb) is weakly visible in all lanes. A PCR control fragment of ~4.7 kb is also visible in all lanes.
Figure 3Characterization of the exon 3 . The lower box shows a patient sequence spanning the deletion. The upper figure indicates the approximate location of each portion of the sequence in respective introns in the normal undeleted gene sequence.
Figure 4Haplotype analysis of patients carrying the . Microsatellites flanking SDHB and intragenic SNPs demonstrate a common haplotype. The common haplotype and the region deleted are indicated.
Clinical summary of patients and family members with the SDHB exon 3 deletion
| BD1 | 41 | Female | Negative | Carotid body paraganglioma, left |
| BD2 | NA | Female | Mother & brother with pheochromocytoma | Extra adrenal pheochromocytoma |
| BD3 | 35 | Male | Negative | Jugulotympanic paraganglioma with raised catecholamine levels. No evidence of pheochromocytoma |
| BD4 | 28 | Male | Negative | Retroperitoneal paraganglioma and paraganglioma of the urinary bladder |
| BD5 | 51 | Female | NA | Bilateral carotid body paraganglioma. Raised urine normetanephrine and dopamine levels, possible extra-adrenal paraganglioma |
| BD6 | 12 | Female | Negative | Malignant extra-adrenal paraganglioma with bone metastases. Pituitary tumor. Paternal grandfather had pituitary tumor. |
| BD7 | 50 | Male | Negative | Carotid body paraganglioma, left |
| BD8 | 18 | Female | NA | Jugulotympanic paraganglioma |
| BD9 | 28 | Male | NA | Retroperitoneal paraganglioma |