4.7 Article

Identification of a novel gene on chromosome 7q31 that is interrupted by a translocation breakpoint in an autistic individual

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 67, Issue 2, Pages 510-514

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/303005

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The results of genetic linkage studies for autism have suggested that a susceptibility locus for the disease is located on the long arm of chromosome 7 (7q). An autistic individual carrying a translocation, t(7;13)(q31.3;q21), with the chromosome 7 breakpoint located in the region of 7q implicated by genetic studies was identified. A novel gene known as RAY1 (or FAM4A1) was found to be directly interrupted by the translocation breakpoint. The gene, which was found to be encoded by 16 exons with evidence of alternative splicing, spanned greater than or equal to 220 kb of DNA at 7q31.3. Mutation screening of the entire coding region in a set of 27 unrelated autistic individuals failed to identify phenotype-specific variants, suggesting that coding region mutations are unlikely to be involved in the etiology of autism. Apparent homologues of RAY1 have also been identified in mouse, rat, pig, chicken, fruit fly, and nematode. The human and mouse genes share similar splicing patterns, and their predicted protein products are 98% identical.

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