[PDF][PDF] Familial dysautonomia is caused by mutations of the IKAP gene

SL Anderson, R Coli, IW Daly, EA Kichula… - The American Journal of …, 2001 - cell.com
SL Anderson, R Coli, IW Daly, EA Kichula, MJ Rork, SA Volpi, J Ekstein, BY Rubin
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2001cell.com
The defective gene DYS, which is responsible for familial dysautonomia (FD) and has been
mapped to a 0.5-cM region on chromosome 9q31, has eluded identification. We identified
and characterized the RNAs encoded by this region of chromosome 9 in cell lines derived
from individuals homozygous for the major FD haplotype, and we observed that the RNA
encoding the IκB kinase complex–associated protein (IKAP) lacks exon 20 and, as a result
of a frameshift, encodes a truncated protein. Sequence analysis reveals a T→ C transition in …
The defective gene DYS, which is responsible for familial dysautonomia (FD) and has been mapped to a 0.5-cM region on chromosome 9q31, has eluded identification. We identified and characterized the RNAs encoded by this region of chromosome 9 in cell lines derived from individuals homozygous for the major FD haplotype, and we observed that the RNA encoding the IκB kinase complex–associated protein (IKAP) lacks exon 20 and, as a result of a frameshift, encodes a truncated protein. Sequence analysis reveals a T→C transition in the donor splice site of intron 20. In individuals bearing a minor FD haplotype, a missense mutation in exon 19 disrupts a consensus serine/threonine kinase phosphorylation site. This mutation results in defective phosphorylation of IKAP. These mutations were observed to be present in a random sample of Ashkenazi Jewish individuals, at approximately the predicted carrier frequency of FD. These findings demonstrate that mutations in the gene encoding IKAP are responsible for FD.
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