Frequency of recent retrotransposition events in the human factor IX gene
โ Scribed by Xuemin Li; William A. Scaringe; Kathleen A. Hill; Stacy Roberts; April Mengos; Diane Careri; Miguel Tezanos Pinto; Carol K. Kasper; Steve S. Sommer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 335 KB
- Volume
- 17
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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โฆ Synopsis
Two germline retrotransposition mutations of recent origin were observed in 727 independent mutations (0.28%) in the human factor IX gene (F9) of patients with hemophilia B: 1) a 279 bp insertion in exon H originating from an Alu family of short interspersed elements not previously known to be active and, 2) a 463 bp insertion in exon E of a LINE1 element originating in the maternal grandmother. If the rates of recent germline mutation in F9 are typical of the genome, a retrotransposition event is estimated to occur somewhere in the genome of about one in every 17 children born. Analysis of other estimates for retrotransposition frequency and overall mutation rates suggests that the actual rate of retrotransposition is likely to be in the range of one in every 2.4 to 28 live births. Hum Mutat 17:511-519, 2001.
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Mutations in Factor IX gene (F9) cause X-linked recessive bleeding disorder hemophilia B. Here, we characterized molecular events in nine North Indian hemophiliac families identifying four missense mutations (three novel), two nonsense mutations, and a deletion. We have also captured the mutational
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