AUTOSOMAL DOMINANT RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA - EXCLUSION OF THE GENE FROM THE SHORT ARM OF CHROMOSOME-I INCLUDING THE REGION SURROUNDING THE RHESUS LOCUS
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 44 (4) , 570-576
Abstract
Members of a large Irish pedigree exhibiting early-onset autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (ADRP) were typed for the rhesus blood group and nine DNA markers on chromosome 1. Close linkage between the ADRP locus and any of the marker loci was excluded using two-point analysis. With use of the sex-averaged maps of Dracopoli et al. and Donis-Keller et al. and a strategy of rolling multipoint analyses, support was gained for the exclusion of ADRP from a 224-cM region of the chromosome, including almost the entire short arm. The disease locus was significnatly excluded from within at least 50 cM of the rhesus locus and, as a loose linkage between these two genes has been suggested by other studies, this result may support the possibility of genetic heterogeneity within the autosomal dominant subgroup of retinitis pigmentosa.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
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