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Variation in novel exons (RACEfrags) of the MECP2 gene in Rett syndrome patients and controls

✍ Scribed by Periklis Makrythanasis; Philipp Kapranov; Lucia Bartoloni; Alexandre Reymond; Samuel Deutsch; Roderic Guigó; France Denoeud; Jorg Drenkow; Colette Rossier; Francesca Ariani; Valeria Capra; Laurent Excoffier; Alessandra Renieri; Thomas R Gingeras; Stylianos E Antonarakis


Book ID
102859608
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
586 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


The study of transcription using genomic tiling arrays has lead to the identification of numerous additional exons. One example is the MECP2 gene on the X chromosome; using 5'RACE and RT-PCR in human tissues and cell lines, we have found more than 70 novel exons (RACEfrags) connecting to at least one annotated exon.. We sequenced all MECP2-connected exons and flanking sequences in 3 groups: 46 patients with the Rett syndrome and without mutations in the currently annotated exons of the MECP2 and CDKL5 genes; 32 patients with the Rett syndrome and identified mutations in the MECP2 gene; 100 control individuals from the same geoethnic group. Approximately 13kb were sequenced per sample, (2.4Mb of DNA resequencing). A total of 75 individuals had novel rare variants (mostly private variants) but no statistically significant difference was found among the 3 groups. These results suggest that variants in the newly discovered exons may not contribute to Rett syndrome. Interestingly however, there are about twice more variants in the novel exons than in the flanking sequences (44 vs. 21 for approximately 1.3 Mb sequenced for each class of sequences, p = 0.0025). Thus the evolutionary forces that shape these novel exons may be different than those of neighboring sequences.


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