Search results for "frameshift mutation"

showing 10 items of 77 documents

Development of primary early-onset colorectal cancers due to biallelic mutations of the FANCD1/BRCA2 gene

2013

International audience; Fanconi anaemia (FA) is characterized by progressive bone marrow failure, congenital anomalies, and predisposition to malignancy. In a minority of cases, FA results from biallelic FANCD1/BRCA2 mutations that are associated with early-onset leukaemia and solid tumours. Here, we describe the clinical and molecular features of a remarkable family presenting with multiple primary colorectal cancers (CRCs) without detectable mutations in genes involved in the Mendelian predisposition to CRCs. We unexpectedly identified, despite the absence of clinical cardinal features of FA, a biallelic mutation of the FANCD1/BRCA2 corresponding to a frameshift alteration (c.1845_1846del…

AdultBiallelic MutationRNA Splicing[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]DNA Mutational AnalysisBiologymedicine.disease_causeArticleFrameshift mutationGeneticsmedicineHumansMissense mutationAge of OnsetGeneAllelesGenetics (clinical)BRCA2 ProteinGeneticsMutationPoint mutationComputational BiologyChromosome BreakageBRCA2 ProteinPedigree3. Good healthAmino Acid SubstitutionMutationFemaleRNA Splice SitesChromosome breakageColorectal NeoplasmsEuropean Journal of Human Genetics
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Homozygous variants in the gene SCAPER cause syndromic intellectual disability

2019

The S-Phase Cyclin A Associated Protein In The ER (SCAPER) gene is a ubiquitously expressed gene with unknown function in the brain. Recently, biallelic SCAPER variants were described in four patients from three families with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and intellectual disability (ID). Here, we expand the spectrum of pathogenic variants in SCAPER and report on 10 further patients from four families with ID, RP, and additional dysmorphic features carrying homozygous variants in SCAPER. The variants found comprise frameshift, nonsense, and missense variants as well as an intragenic homozygous deletion, which spans SCAPER exons 15 and 16 and introduces a frameshift and a premature stop codon. A…

AdultMale0301 basic medicineAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectCyclin ANonsenseGene Expression030105 genetics & heredityFrameshift mutationConsanguinityMice03 medical and health sciencesExonNeural Stem CellsIntellectual DisabilityRetinitis pigmentosaGene expressionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansMissense mutationFamilyChildGeneGenetics (clinical)media_commonCerebral CortexNeuronsGeneticsbiologyHomozygoteSyndromemedicine.diseasePedigree030104 developmental biologyMutationbiology.proteinFemaleCarrier ProteinsRetinitis PigmentosaAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
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Phenotypical features of two patients diagnosed with PHARC syndrome and carriers of a new homozygous mutation in the ABHD12 gene.

2018

Abstract PHARC (Polyneuropathy, Hearing loss, Ataxia, Retinitis pigmentosa and Cataracts) (MIM# 612674 ) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease caused by mutations in the ABHD12 gene. We evaluated two Spanish siblings affected with pes cavus, sensorimotor neuropathy, hearing loss, retinitis pigmentosa and juvenile cataracts in whom the genetic test of ABHD12 revealed a novel homozygous frameshift mutation, c.211_223del (p.Arg71Tyrfs*26). The earliest clinical manifestation in these patients was a demyelinating neuropathy manifested with a Charcot-Marie-Tooth phenotype over three decades. Progressive hearing loss, cataracts and retinitis pigmentosa appeared after the age of 30. …

AdultMaleARLID12 genecongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesmedicine.medical_specialtyAtaxiagenetic structuresHearing lossUsher syndromeCharcot-Marie-Tooth diseaseCataractFrameshift mutation03 medical and health sciencesPolyneuropathies0302 clinical medicineCataractsRetinitis pigmentosaotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalDeaf-blindnessbusiness.industryPHARCBrainmedicine.diseaseDermatologyMagnetic Resonance Imagingeye diseasesMonoacylglycerol LipasesPedigreePhenotypeNeurologySpainMutation030221 ophthalmology & optometryAtaxiasense organsNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptombusinessUsher syndromePolyneuropathy030217 neurology & neurosurgeryRetinitis PigmentosaRetinopathyJournal of the neurological sciences
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Molecular analysis of Gaucher disease: distribution of eight mutations and the complete gene deletion in 27 patients from Germany

1997

Gaucher disease is the most common lysosomal storage disease with a high prevalence in the Ashkenazi Jewish population but it is also present in other populations. The presence of eight mutations (1226G, 1448C, IVS2+1. 84GG, 1504T, 1604T, 1342C and 1297T) and the complete deletion of the beta-glucocerebrosidase gene was investigated in 25 unrelated non-Jewish patients with Gaucher's disease in Germany. In the Jewish population, three of these mutations account for more than 90% of all mutated alleles. In addition, relatives of two patients were included in our study. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis and sequencing of PCR products obtained from DNA of peripheral blood leukoc…

AdultMaleAdolescentGenotypePopulationBiologymedicine.disease_causeCompound heterozygosityFrameshift mutationGermanyGenotypeGeneticsmedicineHumansAlleleChildeducationGeneAllelesGenetics (clinical)GeneticsMutationeducation.field_of_studyGaucher DiseaseMiddle AgedPhenotypeChild PreschoolMutationFemaleRestriction fragment length polymorphismGene DeletionPolymorphism Restriction Fragment LengthHuman Genetics
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Cholinesterase variants: rapid characterisation by PCR/SSCP and evidence for molecular homogeneity.

1995

We have applied the technique of PCR-SSCP (polymerase chain reaction-single stranded conformation polymorphism) to characterise the molecular basis of cholinesterase deficiency and variants in a Jordanian family. PCR-SSCP proved to be a quick and sensitive method of screening cholinesterase variants in a clinical setting. An AG insertion at position 351 was found to cause a silent allele, for which the parents were heterozygous and three children homozygous. In addition, the father and two sons were heterozygous for an A to G transition at position 209, known to cause the dibucaine resistant variant. No linkage to the K variant was found, which has been reported previously in white populati…

AdultMaleGenotypeGenetic LinkageMolecular Sequence DataDibucainePolymerase Chain ReactionFrameshift mutationlaw.inventionlawGenetic linkageGenotypeGeneticsCholinesterasesHumansPoint MutationGenetic TestingAlleleFrameshift MutationGenetics (clinical)PolymerasePolymerase chain reactionAllelesPolymorphism Single-Stranded ConformationalCholinesteraseGeneticsJordanbiologyBase SequencePoint mutationSequence Analysis DNAMolecular biologyPedigreebiology.proteinFemaleMetabolism Inborn ErrorsResearch ArticleJournal of medical genetics
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Truncating mutations in the last exon of NOTCH2 cause a rare skeletal disorder with osteoporosis.

2010

Hajdu-Cheney syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant skeletal disorder with facial anomalies, osteoporosis and acro-osteolysis. We sequenced the exomes of six unrelated individuals with this syndrome and identified heterozygous nonsense and frameshift mutations in NOTCH2 in five of them. All mutations cluster to the last coding exon of the gene, suggesting that the mutant mRNA products escape nonsense-mediated decay and that the resulting truncated NOTCH2 proteins act in a gain-of-function manner.

AdultMaleHeterozygoteHajdu–Cheney syndromeAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectNonsenseMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causeHajdu-Cheney SyndromeFrameshift mutationExonYoung AdultRare DiseasesSkeletal disorderGeneticsmedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceReceptor Notch2Frameshift MutationGeneExome sequencingmedia_commonGeneticsMutationBase SequenceDNAExonsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePedigreeCodon NonsenseChild PreschoolMutationFemaleSignal TransductionNature genetics
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A two base pair deletion in the PQBP1 gene is associated with microphthalmia, microcephaly, and mental retardation.

2007

X-linked mental retardation has been traditionally divided into syndromic (S-XLMR) and non-syndromic forms (NS-XLMR), although the borderlines between these phenotypes begin to vanish and mutations in a single gene, for example PQBP1, can cause S-XLMR as well as NS-XLMR. Here, we report two maternal cousins with an apparently X-linked phenotype of mental retardation (MR), microphthalmia, choroid coloboma, microcephaly, renal hypoplasia, and spastic paraplegia. By multipoint linkage analysis with markers spanning the entire X-chromosome we mapped the disease locus to a 28-Mb interval between Xp11.4 and Xq12, including the BCOR gene. A missense mutation in BCOR was described in a family with …

AdultMaleMicrocephalycongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesGermline mosaicismLocus (genetics)BiologyMicrophthalmiaFrameshift mutationGenetic linkageGenes X-LinkedIntellectual DisabilityGeneticsmedicineMissense mutationHumansMicrophthalmosAbnormalities MultipleFrameshift MutationGenetics (clinical)GeneticsChromosomes Human XNuclear ProteinsGenetic Diseases X-LinkedSyndromemedicine.diseasePedigreeLenz microphthalmia syndromeDNA-Binding ProteinsChild PreschoolMicrocephalyFemaleCarrier ProteinsGene DeletionEuropean journal of human genetics : EJHG
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Plectin-related scapuloperoneal myopathy with treatment-responsive myasthenic syndrome

2020

AdultMalePathologymedicine.medical_specialtyHistologymyasthenic syndromeMuskel- und KnochenstoffwechselPathology and Forensic MedicineEpidermolysis bullosa simplexAdrenergic AgentsPhysiology (medical)medicineHumansMuscular dystrophyFrameshift MutationEphedrineMyasthenic Syndromes Congenitalbusiness.industryPlectin-relatedPlectinmedicine.diseaseScapuloperoneal myopathyMuscular Dystrophy Emery-Dreifusstreatment-responsiveNeurologyPlectinNeurology (clinical)business
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A new germline mutation in BRCA1 gene in a sicilian family with ovarian cancer

2005

A group of 103 sicilian patients with hereditary and familiar breast and/or ovarian cancer were screened for Breast Cancer 1 gene (BRCA1) mutations by direct sequencing PCR products spanning the coding region and partial intronic regions of the BRCA1 gene. In this study, we report a new germline mutation in BRCA1 gene, not previously reported in the BIC database, in a woman with ovarian cancer at 46 years old. Mother's proband has been diagnosed the same histotype of ovarian cancer at 42 age. The mutational analyses that shown a 4843delC frameshift mutation in exon 16 of BRCA1 gene was extended to other family members including the proband's brother and her two sons. Direct automatic sequen…

AdultMaleProbandcongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesCancer Researchendocrine system diseasesGenetic counselingCystadenocarcinomaGenes BRCA1BiologyFrameshift mutationExonGermline mutationBreast cancermedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseFrameshift MutationSicilyGerm-Line MutationOvarian NeoplasmsBRCA1 Direct automatic sequencing Germline mutation Ovarian cancerGeneticsMiddle Agedmedicine.diseasePedigreeOncologyMutation (genetic algorithm)Cancer researchFemaleOvarian cancerBreast Cancer Research and Treatment
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Calreticulin Mutations in Myeloproliferative Neoplasms: Comparison of Three Diagnostic Methods

2015

International audience; Calreticulin (CALR) mutations have recently been reported in 70-84% of JAK2V617F-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPN), and this detection has become necessary to improve the diagnosis of MPN. In a large single-centre cohort of 298 patients suffering from Essential Thrombocythemia (ET), the JAK2V617F, CALR and MPL mutations were noted in 179 (60%), 56 (18.5%) and 13 (4.5%) respectively. For the detection of the CALR mutations, three methods were compared in parallel: high-resolution melting-curve analysis (HRM), product-sizing analysis and Sanger sequencing. The sensitivity for the HRM, product-sizing analysis and Sanger sequencing was 96.4%, 98.2% and 89.3% re…

AdultMaleSequence analysislcsh:MedicineBiologymedicine.disease_causeSensitivity and SpecificityDNA sequencingFrameshift mutationYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencessymbols.namesake0302 clinical medicineINDEL MutationmedicineHumanslcsh:ScienceFrameshift MutationAged030304 developmental biologyAged 80 and overSanger sequencingGenetics0303 health sciencesMutationMultidisciplinaryEssential thrombocythemialcsh:RMiddle Agedmedicine.disease3. Good health030220 oncology & carcinogenesisBone marrow neoplasmMutationbiology.proteinsymbolslcsh:QFemaleBone Marrow NeoplasmsCalreticulinSequence AnalysisCalreticulin[SDV.MHEP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathologyResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
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