Author:
Tipping A. J.,Pearson T.,Morgan N. V.,Gibson R. A.,Kuyt L. P.,Havenga C.,Gluckman E.,Joenje H.,de Ravel T.,Jansen S.,Mathew C. G.
Abstract
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a rare, genetically heterogeneous autosomal
recessive disorder associated with progressive aplastic anemia,
congenital abnormalities, and cancer. FA has a very high incidence in
the Afrikaner population of South Africa, possibly due to a founder
effect. Previously we observed allelic association between polymorphic
markers flanking the FA group A gene (FANCA) and disease
chromosomes in Afrikaners. We genotyped 26 FA families with
microsatellite and single nucleotide polymorphic markers and detected
five FANCA haplotypes. Mutation scanning of the
FANCA gene revealed association of these haplotypes with
four different mutations. The most common was an intragenic deletion of
exons 12–31, accounting for 60% of FA chromosomes in 46 unrelated
Afrikaner FA patients, while two other mutations accounted for an
additional 20%. Screening for these mutations in the European
populations ancestral to the Afrikaners detected one patient from the
Western Ruhr region of Germany who was heterozygous for the major
deletion. The mutation was associated with the same unique
FANCA haplotype as in Afrikaner patients. Genealogical
investigation of 12 Afrikaner families with FA revealed that all were
descended from a French Huguenot couple who arrived at the Cape on June
5, 1688, whereas mutation analysis showed that the carriers of the
major mutation were descendants of this same couple. The molecular and
genealogical evidence is consistent with transmission of the major
mutation to Western Germany and the Cape near the end of the 17th
century, confirming the existence of a founder effect for FA in South
Africa.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
94 articles.
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