RECURRENCE OF LETHAL OSTEOGENESIS IMPERFECTA DUE TO PARENTAL MOSAICISM FOR A DOMINANT MUTATION IN A HUMAN TYPE-I COLLAGEN GENE (COLIAI)
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 46 (3), 591-601
Abstract
We have determined that two infants with perinatal lethal osteogenesis imperfecta in one family had the same new dominant point mutation. Although not detected in his dermal fibroblast DNA, the mutation was detected in somatic DNA from the father''s hair root bulbs and lymphocytes. The mutation was also detected in the father''s sperm, demonstrating that mosaicism in the father''s germ line explain recurrence. The presence of both germ-like and somatic mosaicism indicates that the mutation occurred prior to segregation of the germ-line and somatic cell progenitors. About one in eight sperm carry the mutation, which implies that at least four progenitor cells populate the germ line in human males. The observation that the mosaic individual is clinically normal suggests that genetic diseases can have both qualitative and quantitative components.This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
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