Fifteen novel FBN1 mutations causing Marfan syndrome detected by heteroduplex analysis of genomic amplicons.

G Nijbroek, S Sood, I McIntosh… - American journal of …, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
G Nijbroek, S Sood, I McIntosh, CA Francomano, E Bull, L Pereira, F Ramirez, RE Pyeritz…
American journal of human genetics, 1995ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Mutations in the gene encoding fibrillin-1 (FBN1), a component of the extracellular
microfibril, cause the Marfan syndrome (MFS). This statement is supported by the
observations that the classic Marfan phenotype cosegregates with intragenic and/or flanking
marker alleles in all families tested and that a significant number of FBN1 mutations have
been identified in affected individuals. We have now devised a method to screen the entire
coding sequence and flanking splice junctions of FBN1. On completion for a panel of nine …
Abstract
Mutations in the gene encoding fibrillin-1 (FBN1), a component of the extracellular microfibril, cause the Marfan syndrome (MFS). This statement is supported by the observations that the classic Marfan phenotype cosegregates with intragenic and/or flanking marker alleles in all families tested and that a significant number of FBN1 mutations have been identified in affected individuals. We have now devised a method to screen the entire coding sequence and flanking splice junctions of FBN1. On completion for a panel of nine probands with classic MFS, six new mutations were identified that accounted for disease in seven (78%) of nine patients. Nine additional new mutations have been characterized in the early stages of a larger screening project. These 15 mutations were equally distributed throughout the gene and, with one exception, were specific to single families. One-third of mutations created premature termination codons, and 6 of 15 substituted residues with putative significance for calcium binding to epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domains. Mutations causing severe and rapidly progressive disease that presents in the neonatal period can occur in a larger region of the gene than previously demonstrated, and the nature of the mutation is as important a determinant as its location, in predisposing to this phenotype.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov