Author/Editor     Orstavik, Karen Helene; Orstavik, Ragnhild E; Naumova, Anna K; D'Adamo, Patrizia
Title     X chromosome inactivation in carriers of Barth syndrome
Type     članek
Source     Am J Hum Genet
Vol. and No.     Letnik 63, št. 5
Publication year     1998
Volume     str. 1457-63
Language     eng
Abstract     Barth syndrome (BTHS) is a rare X-linked recessive disorder characterized by cardiac and skeletal myopathy, neutropenia, and short stature. A gene for BTHS, G4.5, was recently cloned and encodes several novel proteins, named tafazzins. Unique mutations have been found. No correlation between the location or type of mutation and the phenotype of BTHS has been found. Female carriers of BTHS seem to be healthy. This could be due to a selection against cells that have the mutant allele on the active X chromosome. We therefore analyzed X chromosome inactivation in 16 obligate carriers of BTHS, from six families, using PCR in the androgen-receptor locus. An extremely skewed X-inactivation pattern (>=95:5), not found in 148 female controls, was found in six carriers. The skewed pattern in two carriers from one family was confirmed in DNA from cultured fibroblasts. Five carriers from two families had a skewed pattern (80:20-<95:5), a pattern that was found in only 11 of 148 female controls. Of the 11 carriers with a skewed pattern, the parental origin of the inactive X chromosome was maternal in all seven cases for which this could be determined. In two families, carriers with an extremely skewed pattern and carriers with a random pattern were found. The skewed X inactivation in 11 of 16 carriers is probably the result of a selection against cells with the mutated gene on the active X chromosome. Since BTHS also shows great clinical variation within families, additional factors are likely to influence the expression of the phenotype. Such factors may also influence the selection mechanism in carriers.
Descriptors     HETEROZYGOTE DETECTION
POINT MUTATION
X CHROMOSOME
ADULT
AGED
BODY HEIGHT
CHILD
EXONS
GENES, RECESSIVE
GROWTH DISORDERS
MUSCULAR DISEASES
NERVE TISSUE PROTEINS
NEUTROPENIA
PEDIGREE
PHENOTYPE
RNA-BINDING PROTEINS
SYNDROME