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Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11
BACKGROUND: Benign infantile convulsions and paroxysmal dyskinesia are episodic cerebral disorders that can share common genetic bases. They can be co-inherited as one single autosomal dominant trait (ICCA syndrome); the disease ICCA gene maps at chromosome 16p12-q12. Despite intensive and conventio...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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Public Library of Science
2010
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2966418/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21060786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013750 |
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author | Roll, Patrice Sanlaville, Damien Cillario, Jennifer Labalme, Audrey Bruneau, Nadine Massacrier, Annick Délepine, Marc Dessen, Philippe Lazar, Vladimir Robaglia-Schlupp, Andrée Lesca, Gaëtan Jouve, Elisabeth Rudolf, Gabrielle Rochette, Jacques Lathrop, G. Mark Szepetowski, Pierre |
author_facet | Roll, Patrice Sanlaville, Damien Cillario, Jennifer Labalme, Audrey Bruneau, Nadine Massacrier, Annick Délepine, Marc Dessen, Philippe Lazar, Vladimir Robaglia-Schlupp, Andrée Lesca, Gaëtan Jouve, Elisabeth Rudolf, Gabrielle Rochette, Jacques Lathrop, G. Mark Szepetowski, Pierre |
author_sort | Roll, Patrice |
collection | PubMed |
description | BACKGROUND: Benign infantile convulsions and paroxysmal dyskinesia are episodic cerebral disorders that can share common genetic bases. They can be co-inherited as one single autosomal dominant trait (ICCA syndrome); the disease ICCA gene maps at chromosome 16p12-q12. Despite intensive and conventional mutation screening, the ICCA gene remains unknown to date. The critical area displays highly complicated genomic architecture and is the site of deletions and duplications associated with various diseases. The possibility that the ICCA syndrome is related to the existence of large-scale genomic alterations was addressed in the present study. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A combination of whole genome and dedicated oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization coupled with quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used. Low copy number of a region corresponding to a genomic variant (Variation_7105) located at 16p11 nearby the centromere was detected with statistical significance at much higher frequency in patients from ICCA families than in ethnically matched controls. The genomic variant showed no apparent difference in size and copy number between patients and controls, making it very unlikely that the genomic alteration detected here is ICCA-specific. Furthermore, no other genomic alteration that would directly cause the ICCA syndrome in those nine families was detected in the ICCA critical area. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data excluded that inherited genomic deletion or duplication events directly cause the ICCA syndrome; rather, they help narrowing down the critical ICCA region dramatically and indicate that the disease ICCA genetic defect lies very close to or within Variation_7105 and hence should now be searched in the corresponding genomic area and its surrounding regions. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2966418 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2010 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-29664182010-11-08 Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 Roll, Patrice Sanlaville, Damien Cillario, Jennifer Labalme, Audrey Bruneau, Nadine Massacrier, Annick Délepine, Marc Dessen, Philippe Lazar, Vladimir Robaglia-Schlupp, Andrée Lesca, Gaëtan Jouve, Elisabeth Rudolf, Gabrielle Rochette, Jacques Lathrop, G. Mark Szepetowski, Pierre PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Benign infantile convulsions and paroxysmal dyskinesia are episodic cerebral disorders that can share common genetic bases. They can be co-inherited as one single autosomal dominant trait (ICCA syndrome); the disease ICCA gene maps at chromosome 16p12-q12. Despite intensive and conventional mutation screening, the ICCA gene remains unknown to date. The critical area displays highly complicated genomic architecture and is the site of deletions and duplications associated with various diseases. The possibility that the ICCA syndrome is related to the existence of large-scale genomic alterations was addressed in the present study. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A combination of whole genome and dedicated oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization coupled with quantitative polymerase chain reaction was used. Low copy number of a region corresponding to a genomic variant (Variation_7105) located at 16p11 nearby the centromere was detected with statistical significance at much higher frequency in patients from ICCA families than in ethnically matched controls. The genomic variant showed no apparent difference in size and copy number between patients and controls, making it very unlikely that the genomic alteration detected here is ICCA-specific. Furthermore, no other genomic alteration that would directly cause the ICCA syndrome in those nine families was detected in the ICCA critical area. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our data excluded that inherited genomic deletion or duplication events directly cause the ICCA syndrome; rather, they help narrowing down the critical ICCA region dramatically and indicate that the disease ICCA genetic defect lies very close to or within Variation_7105 and hence should now be searched in the corresponding genomic area and its surrounding regions. Public Library of Science 2010-10-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2966418/ /pubmed/21060786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013750 Text en Roll et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Roll, Patrice Sanlaville, Damien Cillario, Jennifer Labalme, Audrey Bruneau, Nadine Massacrier, Annick Délepine, Marc Dessen, Philippe Lazar, Vladimir Robaglia-Schlupp, Andrée Lesca, Gaëtan Jouve, Elisabeth Rudolf, Gabrielle Rochette, Jacques Lathrop, G. Mark Szepetowski, Pierre Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title | Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title_full | Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title_fullStr | Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title_full_unstemmed | Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title_short | Infantile Convulsions with Paroxysmal Dyskinesia (ICCA Syndrome) and Copy Number Variation at Human Chromosome 16p11 |
title_sort | infantile convulsions with paroxysmal dyskinesia (icca syndrome) and copy number variation at human chromosome 16p11 |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2966418/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21060786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0013750 |
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