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Screen for MAOA mutations in target human groups

✍ Scribed by Schuback, Deborah E.; Mulligan, Evan L.; Sims, Katherine B.; Tivol, Elizabeth A.; Greenberg, Benjamin D.; Chang, Shu-Fen; Yang, Show-Lin; Mau, Yi-Chien; Shen, Chen-Yang; Ho, Mei-Shang; Yang, Nan-Hua; Butler, Merlin G.; Fink, Stephen; Schwartz, Charles E.; Berlin, F.; Breakefield, Xandra O.; Murphy, Dennis L.; Hsu, Yun-Pung Paul


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
15 KB
Volume
88
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


described males with an MAO-A deficiency state resulting from a premature stop codon in the coding region of the MAOA gene. This deficiency state was associated with abnormal levels of amines and amine metabolites in urine and plasma of affected males, as well as low normal intelligence and apparent difficulty in impulse control, including inappropriate sexual behavior. In the present study, disruption of the MAOA gene was evaluated in males with mental retardation with and without a history of sexually deviant behavior, as well as normal controls, healthy males, and patients with other diseases (Parkinson disease, Lesch-Nyhan syndrome). When available, plasma samples were evaluated first for levels of 3-methoxy, 4-hydroxyphenolglycol (MHPG), a metabolite of norepinephrine which serves as the most sensitive index of MAO-A activity in humans. Blood DNA from individuals with abnormally low MHPG, and from other individuals for whom metabolite levels were not available, were screened for nucleotide variations in the coding region of the MAOA gene by single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis across all 15 exons and splice junctions, and by sequencing, when indicated by either altered metabolites or SSCP shifts. No evidence for mutations disrupting the MAOA gene was found in 398 samples from the target populations, including institutionalized mentally retarded males (N = 352) and males participating in a sexual disorders clinic (N = 46), as well as control groups (N = 75). These studies indicate that MAOA deficiency states are not common in humans. Am. J. Med. Genet. (Neuropsychiatr. Genet.) 88:25-28, 1999.


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