A gene defect that causes conduction system disease and dilated cardiomyopathy maps to chromosome 1p1–1q1

S Kass, C MacRae, HL Graber, EA Sparks… - Nature …, 1994 - nature.com
S Kass, C MacRae, HL Graber, EA Sparks, D McNamara, H Boudoulas, CT Basson…
Nature genetics, 1994nature.com
Longitudinal evaluation of a seven generation kindred with an inherited conduction system
defect and dilated cardiomyopathy demonstrated autosomal dominant transmission of a
progressive disorder that both perturbs atrioventricular conduction and depresses cardiac
contractility. To elucidate the molecular genetic basis for this disorder, a genome–wide
linkage analysis was performed. Polymorphic loci near the centromere of chromosome 1
demonstrated linkage to the disease locus (maximum multipoint lod score= 13.2 in the …
Abstract
Longitudinal evaluation of a seven generation kindred with an inherited conduction system defect and dilated cardiomyopathy demonstrated autosomal dominant transmission of a progressive disorder that both perturbs atrioventricular conduction and depresses cardiac contractility. To elucidate the molecular genetic basis for this disorder, a genome–wide linkage analysis was performed. Polymorphic loci near the centromere of chromosome 1 demonstrated linkage to the disease locus (maximum multipoint lod score = 13.2 in the interval between D1S305 and D1S176). Based on the disease phenotype and map location we speculate that gap junction protein connexin 40 is a candidate for mutations that result in conduction system disease and dilated cardiomyopathy.
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