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Hermann-Josef Lüdecke, Michael J.Wagner, Judith Nardmann, Biagio La Pillo, Julia E.Parrish, Patrick J.Willems, Eric A.Haan, Moshe Frydman, Guus J.H.Hamers, Dan E.Weils, Bernhard Horsthemke, Molecular dissection of a contiguous gene syndrome: localization of the genes involved in the Langer—Giedion syndrome, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 4, Issue 1, January 1995, Pages 31–36, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/4.1.31
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Abstract
The Langer-Giedion syndrome (tricho-rhino-phalangeal syndrome type II, TRPS II) is characterized by craniofacial dysmorphism and skeletal abnormalities. It combines the clinical features of TRPS I and multiple cartilaginous exostoses (EXT). We have used YAC cloning, Southern blotting, PCR analysis, and fluorescence in situ hybridization to study chromosome 8 deletions, translocatlons, an inversion, and an Insertion in patients with TRPS I, TRPS II or EXT. Our results indicate that the TRPS gene maps more than 1,000 kb proximal to the EXT1 gene and that both genes are affected in TRPS II. We conclude that TRPS II is not due to pleiotropic effects of mutations in a single gene, but that it is a true contiguous gene syndrome.
- polymerase chain reaction
- congenital abnormality
- fluorescent in situ hybridization
- mutation
- cloning
- southern blot assay
- chromosomes, human, pair 8
- tissue dissection
- hereditary multiple exostoses
- genes
- langer-giedion syndrome
- signs and symptoms
- trichorhinophalangeal dysplasia type i
- microdeletion syndromes
- maps