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PVRL1 variants contribute to non-syndromic cleft lip and palate in multiple populations

✍ Scribed by Joseph R. Avila; Peter A. Jezewski; Alexandre R. Vieira; Iêda M. Orioli; Eduardo E. Castilla; Kaare Christensen; Sandra Daack-Hirsch; Paul A. Romitti; Jeffrey C. Murray


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
217 KB
Volume
140A
Category
Article
ISSN
1552-4825

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Poliovirus Receptor Like‐1 (PVRL1) is a member of the immunoglobulin super family that acts in the initiation and maintenance of epithelial adherens junctions and is mutated in the cleft lip and palate/ectodermal dysplasia 1 syndrome (CLPED1, OMIM #225000). In addition, a common non‐sense mutation in PVRL1 was discovered more often among non‐syndromic sporadic clefting cases in Northern Venezuela in a previous case‐control study. The present work sought to ascertain the role of PVRL1 in the sporadic forms of orofacial clefting in multiple populations. Multiple rare and common variants from all three splice isoforms were initially ascertained by sequencing 92 Iowan and 86 Filipino cases and CEPH controls. Using a family‐based analysis to examine these variants, the common glycine allele of the G361V coding variant was significantly overtransmitted among all orofacial clefting phenotypes (P = 0.005). This represented G361V genotyping from over 800 Iowan, Danish, and Filipino families. Among four rare amino acid changes found within the V1 and C1 domains, S112T and T131A were found adjacent to critical amino acid positions within the V1 variable domain, regions previously shown to mediate cell‐to‐cell and cell‐to‐virus adhesion. The T131A variant was not found in over 1,300 non‐affected control samples although the alanine is found in other species. The serine of the S112T variant position is conserved across all known PVRL1 sequences. Together these data suggest that both rare and common mutations within PVRL1 make a minor contribution to disrupting the initiation and regulation of cell‐to‐cell adhesion and downstream morphogenesis of the embryonic face. © 2006 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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