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The American Journal of Human Genetics http://www.ajhg.org/
A new type of mutation in the human genome In the July issue of The
American Journal of Human Genetics, researchers from Indiana University
reveal a new mechanism for mutation in the human genome by providing
evidence that duplicated regions of DNA can be located at chromosomal
regions distant to each other. Duplications of DNA in humans have long
been known to occur, but they are generally found as two side-by-side
copies of the duplicated region, either in tandem or in inverse orientations.
Now, Dr. Marion Hodes and colleagues have identified two families afflicted
with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and have discovered that the disease
in both families results from the insertion of a duplicated region of
DNA at a distant site to the original copy, resulting in a noncontiguous
duplication of genetic sequences. The duplicated region includes the
gene for the proteolipid protein, the gene associated with Pelizaeus-Merzbacher,
a neurologic disease that leads to psychomotor developmental delay and
abnormal muscle tone. Pelizaeus-Merzbacher is one of several genetic
syndromes that arise when a gene within a duplicated region of DNA has
a dose-sensitive effect. That is, the presence of more copies of the
gene, and therefore of more gene product, is deleterious. This new form
of genetic duplication implies that the human genome has more ways of
rearranging itself than were previously appreciated. While contiguous
duplications arise from recombination between stretches of similar,
repeated DNA, noncontiguous duplications must arise through a new mechanism
that involves excision of the duplicated portion of DNA and at least
three breaks to the DNA. As the chromosomes containing these duplications
appear normal, and as duplications don't necessarily lead to disease,
the prevalence of noncontiguous duplications is unknown at this point.
Although the complete process by which these duplications arise is not
clear, their identification gives researchers insight into the plasticity
of the human genome.
For the full text of this article, entitled "Additional
copies of the proteolipid protein gene causing Pelizaeus-Merzbacher
disease arising by separate integration into the X chromosome",see the
"July 2000"section in the electronic edition of The American Journal
of Human Genetics at http://www.ajhg.org
http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/ajh-ant061300.html
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