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a Department of
Oral Biology, University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, 614 Salk Hall, 3501 Terrace Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA, b Department of Periodontics, Loma Linda
University, Loma Linda, CA 92354, USA, c Department of Health Sciences,
Kristianstad University, Sweden, d Department
of Periodontology, University of Istanbul School of Dentistry,
Istanbul, Turkey, e Department of Human Genetics, University of
Pittsburgh, Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA
Correspondence to: Dr T C Hart, hart{at}cpc.pitt.edu
Revised version received 27 November 2000;
Accepted for publication 28
November 2000
We describe a mutation and haplotype analysis of
Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome probands that provides evidence of a
founder effect for four separate cathepsin C mutations. A total of 25 different cathepsin C mutations have been reported in 32 families with
Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome (PLS) and associated conditions. A
characteristic of these findings is the diversity of different
cathepsin C mutations that have been identified. To evaluate the
generality of cathepsin C mutations, PLS probands representative of
five reportedly unrelated Saudi Arabian families were evaluated by
mutational and haplotype analyses. Sequence analysis identified two
cathepsin C gene mutations: a novel exon 7 G300D mutation was found in
the proband from one family, while probands from four families shared a
common R272P mutation in exon 6. The R272P mutation has been previously
reported in two other non-Saudi families. The presence of the R272P
mutation in probands from these four Saudi families makes this the most frequently reported cathepsin C mutation. To distinguish between the
presence of a possible founder effect or a mutational hot spot for the
R272P mutation, we performed haplotype analysis using six novel DNA
polymorphisms that span a 165 kb interval containing the cathepsin C
gene. Results of haplotype analysis for genetic polymorphisms within
and flanking the cathepsin C gene are consistent with inheritance of
the R272P mutation "identical by descent" from a common ancestor in
these four Saudi families. Haplotype analysis of multiple PLS probands
homozygous for other cathepsin C mutations (W249X, Q286X, and T153I)
also supports inheritance of each of these mutations from common
ancestors. These data suggest that four of the more frequently reported
cathepsin C mutations have been inherited from common ancestors and
provide the first direct evidence for a founder effect for cathepsin C
gene mutations in PLS. Identification of these six short tandem repeat
polymorphisms that span the cathepsin C gene will permit haplotype
analyses to determine other founder haplotypes of cathepsin C mutations in additional PLS families.
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