Germline mutations in the Wilms' tumor suppressor gene are associated with abnormal urogenital development in Denys-Drash syndrome

J Pelletier, W Bruening, CE Kashtan, SM Mauer… - Cell, 1991 - Elsevier
J Pelletier, W Bruening, CE Kashtan, SM Mauer, JC Manivel, JE Striegel, DC Houghton…
Cell, 1991Elsevier
Denys-Drash syndrome is a rare human condition inwhich severe urogenital aberrations
result in renal fail ure, pseudohermaphroditism, and Wilms' tumor (neph roblastoma). To
investigate its possible role, we have analyzed the coding exons of the Wilms' tumor
suppressor gene (WT1) for germline mutations. In ten independent cases of Denys-Drash
syndrome, point mutations in the zinc finger domains of one WT1 gene copy were found.
Nine of these mutations are found within exon 9 (zinc finger III); the remaining mutation is in …
Summary
Denys-Drash syndrome is a rare human condition inwhich severe urogenital aberrations result in renal fail ure, pseudohermaphroditism, and Wilms' tumor (neph roblastoma). To investigate its possible role, we have analyzed the coding exons of the Wilms' tumor suppressor gene (WT1) for germline mutations. In ten independent cases of Denys-Drash syndrome, point mutations in the zinc finger domains of one WT1 gene copy were found. Nine of these mutations are found within exon 9 (zinc finger III); the remaining mutation is in axon 8 (zinc finger II). These mutations directly affect DNA sequence recognition. In two families analyzed, the mutations were shown to arise de novo. Wilms' tumors from three individuals and one juvenile granulosa cell tumor demonstrate reduction to homozygosity for the mutated WT1 allele. Our results provide evidence of a direct role for WT1 in Denys-Drash syndrome and thus urogenital system development.
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