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Kirsten M. Timms, Marie-Louise Bondeson, M. Ali Ansari-Lari, Kristina Lagersted, Donna M. Muzny, Shannon P. Dugan-Rocha, David L. Nelson, Ulf Pettersson, Richard A. Gibbs, Molecular and phenotypic variation in patients with severe Hunter syndrome, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 6, Issue 3, March 1997, Pages 479–486, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/6.3.479
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Abstract
Severe Hunter syndrome is a fatal X-linked lysosomal storage disorder caused by iduronate-2-sulphatase (IDS) deficiency. Patients with complete deletion of the IDS locus often have atypical phenotypes including ptosis, obstructive sleep apnoea, and the occurrence of seizures. We have used genomie DNA sequencing to identify several new genes in the IDS region. DNA deletion patients with atypical symptoms have been analysed to determine whether these atypical symptoms could be due to involvement of these other loci. The occurrence of seizures in two individuals correlated with a deletion extending proximal of IDS, up to and including part of the FMR2 locus. Other (non-seizure) symptoms were associated with distal deletions. In addition, a group of patients with no variant symptoms, and a characteristic rearrangement involving a recombination between the IDS gene and an adjacent IDS pseudogene (IDSψ), showed normal expression of loci distal to IDS. Together, these results identify FMR2 as a candidate gene for seizures, when mutated along with IDS.
- phenotype
- polymerase chain reaction
- seizures
- mutation
- obstructive sleep apnea
- eyelid ptosis
- dna
- genes
- iduronate sulfatase
- lysosomal storage diseases
- mucopolysaccharidosis ii
- pseudogenes
- recombination, genetic
- reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction
- sequence analysis, dna
- x-linked inheritance
- candidate disease gene
- atypical