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The Mouse Pink‐Eyed Dilution Gene: Association with Hypopigmentation in Prader‐Willi and Angelman Syndromes and with Human OCA2
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Citations
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References
1994
Year
Ocular DiseaseDevelopmental BiologyOphthalmologyGenetic DisorderGeneticsHuman Oca2PathologyP GeneAngelman SyndromesMolecular GeneticsDisease Gene IdentificationOcular PathologyReproductive BiologyMedicineEpigeneticsPws PatientsOca2 Patients
Mutations at the mouse pink-eyed dilution locus, p, cause hypopigmentation. We have cloned the mouse p gene cDNA and the cDNA of its human counterpart, P. The region of mouse chromosome 7 containing the p locus is syntenic with human chromosome 15q11-q13, a region associated with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS), both of which involve profound imprinting effects. PWS patients lack sequences of paternal origin from 15q, whereas AS patients lack a maternal copy of an essential region from 15q. However, the critical regions for these syndromes are much smaller than the chromosomal region commonly deleted that often includes the P gene. Hypopigmentation in PWS and AS patients is correlated with deletions of one copy of the human P gene that is highly homologous with its mouse counterpart. A subset of PWS and AS patients also have OCA2. These patients lack one copy of the P gene in the context of a PWS or AS deletion, with a mutation in the remaining chromosomal homologue of the P gene. Mutations in both homologues of the P gene of OCA2 patients who do not have PWS or AS have also been detected.
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