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Deletions in the COL4A5 collagen gene in X-linked Alport syndrome. Characterization of the pathological transcripts in nonrenal cells and correlation with disease expression.
C Antignac, B Knebelmann, L Drouot, F Gros, G Deschênes, M C Hors-Cayla, J Zhou, K Tryggvason, J P Grünfeld, M Broyer
C Antignac, B Knebelmann, L Drouot, F Gros, G Deschênes, M C Hors-Cayla, J Zhou, K Tryggvason, J P Grünfeld, M Broyer
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Research Article

Deletions in the COL4A5 collagen gene in X-linked Alport syndrome. Characterization of the pathological transcripts in nonrenal cells and correlation with disease expression.

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Abstract

The type IV collagen alpha 5 chain (COL4A5) gene of 88 unrelated male patients with X-linked Alport syndrome was tested for major gene rearrangements by Southern blot analysis, using COL4A5 cDNA probes. 14 different deletions were detected, providing a 16% deletion rate in the COL4A5 gene in the patient population. The deletions are dispersed all over the gene with different sizes, ranging from 1 kb to the complete absence of the gene (> 250 kb) in one patient. In four patients with intragenic deletions, absence of the alpha 3 (IV) chain in the glomerular basement membrane was demonstrated by immunohistochemical studies. This finding supports the hypothesis that abnormalities in the alpha 5 (IV) chain may prevent normal incorporation of the alpha 3 (IV) chain into the glomerular basement membrane. Direct sequencing of cDNA amplified from lymphoblast mRNA of four patients with internal gene deletions, using appropriate combinations of primers amplifying across the predicted boundaries of the deletions, allowed us to determine the effect of the genomic rearrangements on the transcripts and, by inference, on the alpha 5 (IV) chain. Regardless of the extent of deletion and of the putative protein product, the 14 deletions occur in patients with juvenile-type Alport syndrome.

Authors

C Antignac, B Knebelmann, L Drouot, F Gros, G Deschênes, M C Hors-Cayla, J Zhou, K Tryggvason, J P Grünfeld, M Broyer

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Usage data is cumulative from February 2025 through February 2026.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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