[PDF][PDF] A new locus for autosomal dominant “pure” hereditary spastic paraplegia mapping to chromosome 12q13, and evidence for further genetic heterogeneity

E Reid, AM Dearlove, M Rhodes… - The American Journal of …, 1999 - cell.com
E Reid, AM Dearlove, M Rhodes, DC Rubinsztein
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 1999cell.com
Autosomal dominant pure hereditary spastic paraplegia (ADPHSP) is clinically
characterized by slowly progressive lower-limb spasticity. The condition is genetically
heterogeneous, and loci have been mapped at chromosomes 2p, 8q, 14q, and 15q. We
have performed a genomewide linkage screen on a large family with ADPHSP, in which
linkage to all four previously known loci was excluded. Analysis of markers on chromosome
12q gave a peak pairwise LOD score of 3.61 at D12S1691, allowing us to assign a new …
Summary
Autosomal dominant pure hereditary spastic paraplegia (ADPHSP) is clinically characterized by slowly progressive lower-limb spasticity. The condition is genetically heterogeneous, and loci have been mapped at chromosomes 2p, 8q, 14q, and 15q. We have performed a genomewide linkage screen on a large family with ADPHSP, in which linkage to all four previously known loci was excluded. Analysis of markers on chromosome 12q gave a peak pairwise LOD score of 3.61 at D12S1691, allowing us to assign a new locus for ADPHSP (a locus that we have designated "SPG10") to this region. Haplotype construction and analysis of recombination events narrowed the SPG10 locus to a 9.2-cM region between markers D12S368 and D12S83. In addition, our data strongly suggest that there are at least six ADPHSP loci, since we describe a further family in which linkage to all five known ADPHSP loci has been excluded.
cell.com