Persistence of the Common Hartnup disease D173N Allele in populations of European origin
Loading...
Date
Authors
Azmanov, Dimitar
Rodgers, Helen
Auray-Blais, Christiane
Giguere, Robert
Bailey, Charles
Broer, Stefan
Rasko, John Edward
Cavanaugh, Juleen
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Hartnup disorder is an aminoaciduria that results from mutations in the recently described gene SLC6A19 on chromosome 5p15.33. The disease is inherited in a simple recessive manner and ten different mutations have been described to date. One mutation, the D173N allele, is present in 42% of Hartnup chromosomes from apparently unrelated families from both Australia and North America. We report an investigation of the origins of the D173N allele using a unique combination of variants including SNPs, microsatellites, and a VNTR across 211 Kb spanning the SLC6A19 locus. All individuals who carry the mutant allele share an identical core haplotype suggesting a single common ancestor, indicating that the elevated frequency of the D173 N allele is not a result of recurrent mutation. Analyses of these data indicate that the allele is more than 1000 years old. We compare the reasons for survival of this allele with other major alleles in some other common autosomal recessive diseases occurring in European Caucasians. We postulate that survival of this allele may be a consequence of failure of the allele to completely inactivate the transport of neutral amino acids.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Annals of Human Genetics
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
2037-12-31
Downloads
File
Description