首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The transmembrane protein meckelin (MKS3) is mutated in Meckel-Gruber syndrome and the wpk rat
Authors:Smith Ursula M  Consugar Mark  Tee Louise J  McKee Brandy M  Maina Esther N  Whelan Shelly  Morgan Neil V  Goranson Erin  Gissen Paul  Lilliquist Stacie  Aligianis Irene A  Ward Christopher J  Pasha Shanaz  Punyashthiti Rachaneekorn  Malik Sharif Saghira  Batman Philip A  Bennett Christopher P  Woods C Geoffrey  McKeown Carole  Bucourt Martine  Miller Caroline A  Cox Phillip  Algazali Lihadh  Trembath Richard C  Torres Vicente E  Attie-Bitach Tania  Kelly Deirdre A  Maher Eamonn R  Gattone Vincent H  Harris Peter C  Johnson Colin A
Affiliation:Section of Medical and Molecular Genetics, Division of Reproductive and Child Health, University of Birmingham Medical School, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK.
Abstract:Meckel-Gruber syndrome is a severe autosomal, recessively inherited disorder characterized by bilateral renal cystic dysplasia, developmental defects of the central nervous system (most commonly occipital encephalocele), hepatic ductal dysplasia and cysts and polydactyly. MKS is genetically heterogeneous, with three loci mapped: MKS1, 17q21-24 (ref. 4); MKS2, 11q13 (ref. 5) and MKS3 (ref. 6). We have refined MKS3 mapping to a 12.67-Mb interval (8q21.13-q22.1) that is syntenic to the Wpk locus in rat, which is a model with polycystic kidney disease, agenesis of the corpus callosum and hydrocephalus. Positional cloning of the Wpk gene suggested a MKS3 candidate gene, TMEM67, for which we identified pathogenic mutations for five MKS3-linked consanguineous families. MKS3 is a previously uncharacterized, evolutionarily conserved gene that is expressed at moderate levels in fetal brain, liver and kidney but has widespread, low levels of expression. It encodes a 995-amino acid seven-transmembrane receptor protein of unknown function that we have called meckelin.
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号