Cargando…

The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity

BACKGROUND: The prevalence and the role of AGG interruptions within the FMR1 gene in the normal population is unknown. In this study, we investigated the frequent of AGG loss, in one or two alleles within the normal population. The role of AGG in the FMR1 stability has been assessed by correlating A...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Manor, Esther, Gonen, Raphael, Sarussi, Benjamin, Keidar‐Friedman, Danielle, Kumar, Jay, Tang, Hiu‐Tung, Tassone, Flora
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6785435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31453660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.946
_version_ 1783457888041172992
author Manor, Esther
Gonen, Raphael
Sarussi, Benjamin
Keidar‐Friedman, Danielle
Kumar, Jay
Tang, Hiu‐Tung
Tassone, Flora
author_facet Manor, Esther
Gonen, Raphael
Sarussi, Benjamin
Keidar‐Friedman, Danielle
Kumar, Jay
Tang, Hiu‐Tung
Tassone, Flora
author_sort Manor, Esther
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The prevalence and the role of AGG interruptions within the FMR1 gene in the normal population is unknown. In this study, we investigated the frequent of AGG loss, in one or two alleles within the normal population. The role of AGG in the FMR1 stability has been assessed by correlating AGG loss to the prevalence of premutation/full mutation in two ethnic groups differing in their consanguinity rate: high versus low consanguinity rate (HCR vs. LCR). METHODS: The CGG repeat allele size and AGG presence were measured in 6,865 and 6,204 females belonging to the LCR (5%) and HCR (>45%) groups, respectively, by Tripled‐Primed‐PCR technique. RESULTS: A lower prevalence of the premutation was observed in the HCR (1:158) as compared to the LCR group (1:128). No full mutation was found in the HCR females while in the LCR group the prevalence found was 1:1,149. Homozygosity rate was higher in the HCR population compared to the LCR group.The overall AGG loss was higher in the HCR population than in the LCR and increased with increased CGG repeat number in both ethnic groups. CONCLUSIONS: Although we observed a significantly higher rate of homozygosity and AGG loss in the HCR group, this did not affect the prevalence of the premutation and full mutation in this population. Their prevalence was significantly lower than in the LCR population. Finally, we discuss whether the loss of AGG could be also a polymorphic event but not only a stabilizing factor.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6785435
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-67854352019-10-17 The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity Manor, Esther Gonen, Raphael Sarussi, Benjamin Keidar‐Friedman, Danielle Kumar, Jay Tang, Hiu‐Tung Tassone, Flora Mol Genet Genomic Med Original Articles BACKGROUND: The prevalence and the role of AGG interruptions within the FMR1 gene in the normal population is unknown. In this study, we investigated the frequent of AGG loss, in one or two alleles within the normal population. The role of AGG in the FMR1 stability has been assessed by correlating AGG loss to the prevalence of premutation/full mutation in two ethnic groups differing in their consanguinity rate: high versus low consanguinity rate (HCR vs. LCR). METHODS: The CGG repeat allele size and AGG presence were measured in 6,865 and 6,204 females belonging to the LCR (5%) and HCR (>45%) groups, respectively, by Tripled‐Primed‐PCR technique. RESULTS: A lower prevalence of the premutation was observed in the HCR (1:158) as compared to the LCR group (1:128). No full mutation was found in the HCR females while in the LCR group the prevalence found was 1:1,149. Homozygosity rate was higher in the HCR population compared to the LCR group.The overall AGG loss was higher in the HCR population than in the LCR and increased with increased CGG repeat number in both ethnic groups. CONCLUSIONS: Although we observed a significantly higher rate of homozygosity and AGG loss in the HCR group, this did not affect the prevalence of the premutation and full mutation in this population. Their prevalence was significantly lower than in the LCR population. Finally, we discuss whether the loss of AGG could be also a polymorphic event but not only a stabilizing factor. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6785435/ /pubmed/31453660 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.946 Text en © 2019 Ben‐Gurion University of the Negev. Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Manor, Esther
Gonen, Raphael
Sarussi, Benjamin
Keidar‐Friedman, Danielle
Kumar, Jay
Tang, Hiu‐Tung
Tassone, Flora
The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title_full The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title_fullStr The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title_full_unstemmed The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title_short The role of AGG interruptions in the FMR1 gene stability: A survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
title_sort role of agg interruptions in the fmr1 gene stability: a survey in ethnic groups with low and high rate of consanguinity
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6785435/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31453660
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.946
work_keys_str_mv AT manoresther theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT gonenraphael theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT sarussibenjamin theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT keidarfriedmandanielle theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT kumarjay theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT tanghiutung theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT tassoneflora theroleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT manoresther roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT gonenraphael roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT sarussibenjamin roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT keidarfriedmandanielle roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT kumarjay roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT tanghiutung roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity
AT tassoneflora roleofagginterruptionsinthefmr1genestabilityasurveyinethnicgroupswithlowandhighrateofconsanguinity