Literature DB >> 22984993

Evaluating SKI as a candidate gene for non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate.

Elisabeth Mangold1, Heiko Reutter, Rafael B R León-Cachón, Kerstin U Ludwig, Stefan Herms, Óscar Chacón-Camacho, Rocío Ortiz-López, Mario Paredes-Zenteno, Abelardo Arizpe-Cantú, Sergio G Muñoz-Jiménez, Stefanie Nowak, Franz-Josef Kramer, Thomas F Wienker, Markus M Nöthen, Michael Knapp, Augusto Rojas-Martínez.   

Abstract

Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is one of the most common of all congenital malformations and has a multifactorial etiology. Findings in mice suggest that the v-ski sarcoma viral oncogene homolog (SKI) gene is a candidate gene for orofacial clefting. In humans, a significant association between rs2843159 within SKI and NSCL/P has been reported in patients from the Philippines and South America. In the South American patients, the association was driven by the subgroup of patients with non-syndromic cleft lip only (NSCLO). Here we investigated the association with rs2843159 in a Mayan Mesoamerican population (172 NSCL/P patients and 366 controls). In addition, we analyzed the phenotypic subgroups NSCLO and non-syndromic cleft of lip and palate (NSCLP). A trend towards association between rs2843159 and NSCL/P was observed in the Mayan cohort (P = 0.097), and we found a stronger association in the NSCLP subgroup (P = 0.072) despite a limited sample size. To investigate whether other common variants within the SKI gene contribute to NSCL/P susceptibility in European and Asian populations, we also analyzed genotypic data from two recent genome-wide association studies using set-based statistical approaches. These analyses detected a trend toward association in the European population. Our data provide limited support for the hypothesis that common SKI variants are susceptibility factors for NSCL/P.
© 2012 Eur J Oral Sci.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22984993     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0722.2012.00991.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Oral Sci        ISSN: 0909-8836            Impact factor:   2.612


  2 in total

1.  Compound heterozygosity of low-frequency promoter deletions and rare loss-of-function mutations in TXNL4A causes Burn-McKeown syndrome.

Authors:  Dagmar Wieczorek; William G Newman; Thomas Wieland; Tea Berulava; Maria Kaffe; Daniela Falkenstein; Christian Beetz; Elisabeth Graf; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Sofia Douzgou; Jill Clayton-Smith; Sarah B Daly; Simon G Williams; Sanjeev S Bhaskar; Jill E Urquhart; Beverley Anderson; James O'Sullivan; Odile Boute; Jasmin Gundlach; Johanna Christina Czeschik; Anthonie J van Essen; Filiz Hazan; Sarah Park; Anne Hing; Alma Kuechler; Dietmar R Lohmann; Kerstin U Ludwig; Elisabeth Mangold; Laura Steenpaß; Michael Zeschnigk; Johannes R Lemke; Charles Marques Lourenco; Ute Hehr; Eva-Christina Prott; Melanie Waldenberger; Anne C Böhmer; Bernhard Horsthemke; Raymond T O'Keefe; Thomas Meitinger; John Burn; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Tim M Strom
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2014-11-26       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Non-syndromic Cleft Lip and Palate Polymorphisms Affect Normal Lip Morphology.

Authors:  Caryl Wilson-Nagrani; Stephen Richmond; Lavinia Paternoster
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2018-10-24       Impact factor: 4.599

  2 in total

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