학술논문

Finding Genetic Contributions to Sporadic Disease: A Recessive Locus at 12q24 Commonly Contributes to Patent Ductus Arteriosus
Document Type
research-article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2002 Nov 01. 99(23), 15054-15059.
Subject
Linkage (Genetics)
Patent Ductus Arteriosus
Consanguinity
Human Chromosomes
Pair 12
Medical Sciences
Patent ductus arteriosus
Genetic loci
Cousins
Heart diseases
Genetic diseases
Medical genetics
Consanguinity
Epidemiology
Lod score
Congenital heart defects
Language
English
ISSN
00278424
Abstract
The causes of many sporadic diseases are unexplained; the contribution of recessive loci with reduced penetrance is one possibility that has been difficult to explore. We describe an approach to this problem by first searching for diseases with higher prevalence in populations with high rates of consanguinity, then determining whether disease cases are more commonly the product of consanguinous union than controls in such populations, followed by analysis of genetic linkage in consanguinous cases. We demonstrate the utility of this approach by investigation of congenital heart disease in Iran. We found that patent ductus arteriosus (PDA), a common congenital heart disease, accounts for a higher fraction of congenital heart disease in Iran (15%) than in the United States (2-7%). Moreover, Iranian PDA cases demonstrated a marked increase of parental consanguinity (63%), compared with the general Iranian population (25%) or control cases with tetralogy of Fallot (30%). The recurrence of PDA among siblings was 5%. A genomewide analysis of linkage in 21 unrelated consanguinous PDA cases demonstrated a multipoint logarithm of odds score of 6.27 in favor of linkage of PDA to a 3-centimorgan interval of chromosome 12q24, with 53% of kindreds linked. These findings together establish a recessive component to PDA and implicate a single locus, PDA1, in one third or more of all PDA cases in Iran; they further suggest a role for this locus in PDA worldwide. Finally, these results suggest a general approach to the identification of recessive contributions to sporadic diseases.