Literature DB >> 9683579

An unknown genetic defect increases venous thrombosis risk, through interaction with protein C deficiency.

S J Hasstedt1, E G Bovill, P W Callas, G L Long.   

Abstract

We used two-locus segregation analysis to test whether an unknown genetic defect interacts with protein C deficiency to increase susceptibility to venous thromboembolic disease in a single large pedigree. Sixty-seven pedigree members carry a His107Pro mutation in the protein C gene, which reduces protein C levels to a mean of 46% of normal. Twenty-one carriers of the mutation and five other pedigree members had verified thromboembolic disease. We inferred the presence in this pedigree of a thrombosis-susceptibility gene interacting with protein C deficiency, by rejecting the hypothesis that the cases of thromboembolic disease resulted from protein C deficiency alone and by not rejecting Mendelian transmission of the interacting gene. When coinherited with protein C deficiency, the interacting gene conferred a probability of a thrombotic episode of approximately 79% for men and approximately 99% for women, before age 60 years.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9683579      PMCID: PMC1377289          DOI: 10.1086/301947

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  49 in total

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6.  The prothrombotic phenotypes in familial protein C deficiency are differentiated by computational modeling of thrombin generation.

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  6 in total

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