Author:
DAHAN KARIN,FUCHSHUBER ARNO,ADAMIS STAVROULA,SMAERS MICHÈLE,KROISS SABINE,LOUTE GUY,COSYNS JEAN-PIERRE,HILDEBRANDT FRIEDHELM,VERELLEN-DUMOULIN CHRISTINE,PIRSON YVES
Abstract
Abstract. Familial juvenile hyperuricemic nephropathy (FJHN) is an autosomal dominant disorder heralded by hyperuricemia during childhood; it is characterized by chronic interstitial nephritis, with marked thickening of tubular basement membranes, and leads to progressive renal failure during adulthood. A gene for FJHN in two Czech families was recently mapped to chromosome 16p11.2, close to the MCKD2 locus, which is responsible for a variant of autosomal dominant medullary cystic kidney disease observed in an Italian family. In a large Belgian family with FJHN, a tight linkage between the disorder and the marker D16S3060, located within the MCKD2 locus on chromosome 16p12 (maximal two-point logarithmic odds score of 3.74 at a recombination fraction of θ = 0), was observed in this study. The candidate region was further narrowed to a 1.3-Mb interval between D16S501 and D16S3036. Together with the striking clinical and pathologic resemblance between previously reported medullary cystic kidney disease type 2 and FJHN occurring in the Belgian family (including the presence of medullary cysts), this study suggests that these two disorders are facets of the same disease.
Publisher
American Society of Nephrology (ASN)
Subject
Nephrology,General Medicine
Cited by
77 articles.
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