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The FANCA gene in Japanese Fanconi anemia: Reports of eight novel mutations and analysis of sequence variability

✍ Scribed by Akira Tachibana; Takesi Kato; Yosuke Ejima; Toshiko Yamada; Takashi Shimizu; Lichun Yang; Yukiko Tsunematsu; Masao S. Sasaki


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
360 KB
Volume
13
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


Fanconi anemia (FA), an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a progressive pancytopenia associated with congenital anomalies and high predisposition to malignancies, is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous disease. At least eight complementation groups (FA-A to FA-H) have been identified with their relative prevalence varying among the ethnical backgrounds. Recently, responsible genes, FANCA and FANCC, have been cloned. This report describes mutations of the FANCA gene, which we studied by direct sequencing of cDNA with confirmation on genomic DNA in 15 unclassified Japanese FA patients. A total of 19 sequence alterations were identified, of which 10 (six missense and four silent alterations) were likely to be nonpathogenic polymorphism. The remaining nine alterations, of which eight were novel mutations, were assumed to be pathogenic and consisted of two missense mutations and seven mutations resulting in truncation of gene product, demonstrating a wide allelic heterogeneity. The pathogenic mutations were found in 12 patients (80%); they were either homozygous or compound heterozygous in 10 patients, apparently heterozygous in two patients and none in three patients. We conclude that the sequence variability is intrinsic to the FANCA gene and that the relative prevalence of the FA-A subtype is unusually high in Japanese FA patients.


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