BLOOM SYNDROME - A SINGLE COMPLEMENTATION GROUP DEFINES PATIENTS OF DIVERSE ETHNIC-ORIGIN

  • 1 June 1988
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 42 (6), 816-824
Abstract
Patients of diverse ethnic background were recruited in order to examine whether genetic heterogeneity could be demonstrated in Bloom syndrome (BS). Although most cells from BS patients exhibit high sister-chromatid exchange (SCE), lymphoid cells from some patients exhibit dimorphism for high and low SCE. We addressed the issue of dominance or recessivity of the low-SCE BS phenotype. A high-SCE lymphoblast line, HB1, was mutagenized, and a clone, HB10T, carrying the markers ouabain resistance and thioguanine resistance, was isolated to serve as a fusion parent. Two independent low-SCE BS lines were fused with HB10T, and hybrids were selected in HAT medium supplemented with ouabain. The hybrids, which were tetraploid, exhibited the expected phenotypes when exposed to ouabain and thioguanine. In every case, these hybrids had low SCE levels, establishing dominance of the low-SCE phenotype. The same methodology was also used to assess genetic heterogeneity in BS. A complementation analysis was carried out using high-SCE lymphoblast cell lines derived from BS patients. HB10T was fused with five other high-SCE BS lines. No correction of the high SCE characteristic of BS cells was seen in hybrid lines derived from patients of Ashkenazi Jewish, French-Canadian, Mennonite, or Japanese extraction. Thus, a single gene is responsible for the high-SCE phenotype in BS patients of diverse ethnic origin.