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. 2002 May;70(5):1357-62.
doi: 10.1086/340258. Epub 2002 Mar 27.

Common deletion of SMAD4 in juvenile polyposis is a mutational hotspot

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Common deletion of SMAD4 in juvenile polyposis is a mutational hotspot

James R Howe et al. Am J Hum Genet. 2002 May.

Abstract

Juvenile polyposis (JP) is an autosomal dominant syndrome in which affected patients develop upper- and/or lower-gastrointestinal (GI) polyps. A subset of families with JP have germline mutations in the SMAD4 (MADH4) gene and are at increased risk of GI cancers. To date, six families with JP have been described as having the same SMAD4 deletion (1244-1247delAGAC). The objective of the present study is to determine whether this deletion is a common ancestral mutation or a mutational hotspot. DNA from members of four families with JP, from Iowa, Mississippi, Texas, and Finland, that had this 4-bp deletion was used to genotype 15 simple tandem repeat polymorphism (STRP) markers flanking the SMAD4 gene, including 2 new STRPs within 6.3 and 70.9 kb of the deletion. Haplotypes cosegregating with JP in each family were constructed, and the distances of the closest markers were determined from the draft sequence of the human genome. No common haplotype was observed in these four families with JP. A 14-bp region containing the deletion had four direct repeats and one inverted repeat. Because no common ancestor was suggested by haplotype analysis and the sequence flanking the deletion contains repeats frequently associated with microdeletions, this common SMAD4 deletion in JP most likely represents a mutational hotspot.

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Figures

Figure  1
Figure 1
Possible mechanism of the 4-bp deletion through slipped mispairing. At the replication fork, the second AG direct repeat can mispair with the complement of the first AG repeat, causing a loop on the upper strand that is excised by DNA repair enzymes. The resultant upper-strand copies will have the 4-bp deletion, whereas the lower-strand copies will be the wild-type sequence.

References

Electronic-Database Information

    1. BLAST, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/
    1. Celera Publication Site, http://public.celera.com/cds/login.cfm (for human genome sequence)
    1. Center for Medical Genetics, http://research.marshfieldclinic.org/genetics/Map_Markers/maps/IndexMapF... (for comprehensive human genetic maps)
    1. Cooperative Human Linkage Center, The, http://www.chlc.org/
    1. GenBank, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank/ (for SMAD4 cDNA [accession number NM_005359], BAC clone RP11-729G3 [accession number AP001374], SMAD4GATA [accession number AF364127], and SMAD4AT/CA [accession number AF364126])

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