4.2 Article

Deletion of JAM-C, a Candidate Gene for Heart Defects in Jacobsen Syndrome, Results in a Normal Cardiac Phenotype in Mice

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
Volume 149A, Issue 7, Pages 1438-1443

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.32913

Keywords

Jacobsen syndrome; heart; JAM-3; hypoplastic left heart; mouse model; 11q deletion

Funding

  1. NIH [K08]
  2. State of South Dakota [2010]

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The 11q terminal deletion disorder (11q-) is a rare chromosomal disorder caused by a deletion in distal 11q. Fifty-six percent of patients have clinically significant congenital heart defects. A cardiac critical region has been identified in distal 11q that contains over 40 annotated genes. In this study, we identify the distal breakpoint of a patient with a paracentric inversion in distal 11q who had hypoplastic left heart and congenital thrombocytopenia. The distal breakpoint mapped to JAM-3, a gene previously identified as a candidate gene for causing HLHS in 11q-. To determine the role of JAM-3 in cardiac development, we performed a comprehensive cardiac phenotypic assessment in which the mouse homolog for JAM-3, JAM-C, has been deleted. These mice have normal cardiac structure and function, indicating that haplo-insufficiency of JAM-3 is unlikely to cause the congenital heart defects that occur in 11q- patients. Notably, we identified a previously undescribed phenotype, jitteriness, in most of the sick or dying adult JAM-Cknockout mice. These data provide further insights into the identification of the putative disease-causing cardiac gene(s) in distal 11q, as well as the functions of JAM-C in normal organ development. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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