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Title: Comprehensive genetic analyses of PLP1 in patients with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease applied by array-CGH and fiber-FISH analyses identified new mutations and variable sizes of duplications. Author: Shimojima K, Inoue T, Hoshino A, Kakiuchi S, Watanabe Y, Sasaki M, Nishimura A, Takeshita-Yanagisawa A, Tajima G, Ozawa H, Kubota M, Tohyama J, Sasaki M, Oka A, Saito K, Osawa M, Yamamoto T. Journal: Brain Dev; 2010 Mar; 32(3):171-9. PubMed ID: 19328639. Abstract: Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD; MIM#312080) is a rare X-linked recessive neurodegenerative disorder. The main cause of PMD is alterations in the proteolipid protein 1 gene (PLP1) on chromosome Xq22.2. Duplications and point mutations of PLP1 have been found in 70% and 10-25% of all patients with PMD, respectively, with a wide clinical spectrum. Since the underlining genomic abnormalities are heterogeneous in patients with PMD, clarification of the genotype-phenotype correlation is the object of this study. Comprehensive genetic analyses using microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) analysis and genomic sequencing were applied to fifteen unrelated male patients with a clinical diagnosis of PMD. Duplicated regions were further analyzed by fiber-fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis. Four novel and one known nucleotide alterations were identified in five patients. Five microduplications including PLP1 were identified by aCGH analysis with the sizes ranging from 374 to 951-kb. The directions of five PLP1 duplications were further investigated by fiber-FISH analysis, and all showed tandem duplications. The common manifestations of the disease in patients with PLP1 mutations or duplications in this study were nystagmus in early infancy, dysmyelination revealed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and auditory brain response abnormalities. Although the grades of dysmyelination estimated by MRI findings were well correlated to the clinical phenotypes of the patients, there is no correlation between the size of the duplications and the phenotypic severity.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]