Publication | Open Access
A never-ending story: the steadily growing family of the FA and FA-like genes
48
Citations
74
References
2017
Year
CytogeneticsNever-ending StoryGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyPathologyMolecular GeneticsGenetic FoundationDisease Gene IdentificationGenomicsFa-like GenesGenetic MedicineTransgenerational EffectClinical GeneticsFanconi AnemiaBone Marrow FailureMendelian DisorderHematologyPublic HealthMolecular DiagnosticsMonogenic DisordersCell BiologyMolecular MedicineChromatinDevelopmental BiologyGenetic DisorderGenetic MechanismMedical GeneticsFa GenesMedicineChromosome 9Mendelian Inheritance
Among the chromosome fragility-associated human syndromes that present cancer predisposition, Fanconi anemia (FA) is unique due to its large genetic heterogeneity. To date, mutations in 21 genes have been associated with an FA or an FA-like clinical and cellular phenotype, whose hallmarks are bone marrow failure, predisposition to acute myeloid leukemia and a cellular and chromosomal hypersensitivity to DNA crosslinking agents exposure. The goal of this review is to trace the history of the identification of FA genes, a history that started in the eighties and is not yet over, as indicated by the cloning of a twenty-first FA gene in 2016.
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