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Query: UNIPROT:Q16637 (
SMA
)
8,107
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Previous reports have established that the telomeric copy of the
survival motor neuron
(
SMNT
) gene and the intact copy of the neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein (NAIP) gene are preferentially deleted in patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Although deletions or mutations in the
SMNT
gene are most highly correlated with SMA, it is not clear to what extent NAIP or other genes influence the SMA phenotype, or whether a small fraction of SMA patients actually have functional copies of both
SMNT
and NAIP. To evaluate further the part of
SMNT
in the development of SMA, we analyzed 280 asymptomatic SMA family members for the presence or absence of
SMNT
exons 7 and 8. We report the following observations: (i) 4% of the sample harbored a polymorphic variant of
SMNT
exon 7 that looks like a homozygous deletion; (ii) approximately 1% of the parents are homozygously deleted for both exons 7 and 8; (iii) one asymptomatic parent lacking both copies of
SMNT
exons 7 and 8 displays a 'subclinical phenotype' characterized by mild neurogenic pathology; (iv) another asymptomatic parent lacking both
SMNT
exons showed no signs of motor neuron disorder by clinical and neurodiagnostic analyses. The demonstration of polymorphic variants of exon 7 that masquerade as homozygous nulls, and the identification of SMA parents who harbor two disease alleles, serve as a caution to those conducting prenatal tests with these markers.
...
PMID:Characterization of survival motor neuron (SMNT) gene deletions in asymptomatic carriers of spinal muscular atrophy. 885 61
The gene for autosomal recessive spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has been mapped to 5q12 in a region that contains repeated markers and genes. Three cDNAs that detect deletions in SMA patients have been reported. One of these, the
survival motor neuron
(
SMN
) cDNA, is encoded by two genes (
SMNT
and
SMNC
) which are distinguished by base changes in exons 7 and 8. Exon 7 of the
SMNT
gene is not detectable in approximately 95% of SMA cases, due either to deletion or sequence conversion. There is limited information on the mutations in SMA patients that have detectable
SMNT
, these are critical for confirmation of
SMNT
as the SMA gene. Using SSCP analysis of the
SMN
exons we screened our SMA patients that possess at least one intact
SMNT
allele for mutations in
SMNT
. We identified one type I SMA patient with an 11 bp duplication in exon 6 which causes a frameshift and premature termination of the deduced
SMNT
protein. Dosage and SSCP analysis of
SMNT
in this family indicated that the father contributed a
SMNT
-deleted allele to the affected child whereas the mother passed on the 11 bp exon 6 duplication
SMNT
allele. Analysis of RNA by RT-PCR conclusively demonstrated that the 11 bp duplication is associated with the
SMNT
locus and not
SMNC
. This mutation provides strong support for
SMN
as the SMA-determining gene and indicates that disruption of
SMNT
on its own is sufficient to produce a severe type I SMA phenotype.
...
PMID:An 11 base pair duplication in exon 6 of the SMN gene produces a type I spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) phenotype: further evidence for SMN as the primary SMA-determining gene. 892 99
The childhood-onset spinal muscular atrophies are a clinically heterogeneous group of autosomal recessive disorders characterized by selective degeneration of the anterior horn cells with subsequent weakness and atrophy of limb muscles. The disease locus has been mapped to a region of chromosome 5q13 characterized by genetic instability and DNA duplication. Among the duplicated genes in this region,
SMNT
(telomeric copy;
survival motor neuron
) is thought to be the major disease determining gene since it is missing in the majority of
SMA
patients and since small, intragenic mutations in the gene have been associated with the disorder. Approximately half of the severely affected SMA I patients are also missing both homologues of a neighboring gene, the neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein (NAIP). These data indicate that loss of NAIP may affect disease severity and further, that the molecular events underlying the childhood-onset SMAs are complex, possibly involving multiple genes. We report a third multicopy gene in the
SMA
region, encoding the p44 subunit of basal transcription factor II (BTF2p44). One copy of this transcription-repair gene is deleted in at least 15% of all
SMA
cases.
...
PMID:A multicopy transcription-repair gene, BTF2p44, maps to the SMA region and demonstrates SMA associated deletions. 906 43
The
survival motor neuron
(
SMN
) transcript is encoded by two genes,
SMNT
and
SMNC
. The autosomal recessive proximal spinal muscular atrophy that maps to 5q12 is caused by mutations in the
SMNT
gene. The
SMNT
gene can be distinguished from the
SMNC
gene by base-pair changes in exons 7 and 8.
SMNT
exon 7 is not detected in approximately 95% of
SMA
cases due to either deletion or sequence-conversion events. Small mutations in
SMNT
now have been identified in some of the remaining nondeletion patients. However, there is no reliable quantitative assay for
SMNT
, to distinguish
SMA
compound heterozygotes from non-5q
SMA
-like cases (phenocopies) and to accurately determine carrier status. We have developed a quantitative PCR assay for the determination of
SMNT
and
SMNC
gene-copy number. This report demonstrates how risk estimates for the diagnosis and detection of
SMA
carriers can be modified by the accurate determination of
SMNT
copy number.
...
PMID:Identification of proximal spinal muscular atrophy carriers and patients by analysis of SMNT and SMNC gene copy number. 919 62
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a motor neuron disease presenting with a wide spectrum of phenotypic variations. The primary cause of most, if not all, forms of childhood-onset spinal muscular atrophy appears to be the homozygous loss of the telomeric copy of the
survival motor neuron
(
SMNT
) gene. It is interesting that approximately half of all affected patients are likewise homozygous nulls for the neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein (NAIP) gene and a somewhat lesser fraction for the basal transcription factor, p44 subunit (BTF2p44) gene. It has been proposed that homozygous loss of
SMNT
is the primary cause of spinal muscular atrophy while the loss of NAIP and perhaps other genes primarily affects the severity of disease manifestation. We explored this hypothesis by evaluating the extent of gene deletions in three multigenerational families with spinal muscular atrophy exhibiting dramatic intrafamilial phenotypic variation. Using somatic cell hybrid lines to sequester individual spinal muscular atrophy homologues, we show that homologues missing several contiguous genes correlate with "severe" disease alleles and homologues missing only
SMNT
correlate with "mild" disease alleles. These observations support the hypothesis that phenotypic severity among the childhood-onset spinal muscular atrophies is directly correlated with the extent of disease-specific deletions.
...
PMID:Extensive DNA deletion associated with severe disease alleles on spinal muscular atrophy homologues. 922 84
Problems with diagnosis and genetic counseling occur for patients with autosomal recessive proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) who do not show the most common mutation: homozygous absence of at least exon 7 of the telomeric
survival motor neuron
gene (
SMN1
). Here we present molecular genetic data for 42 independent nondeleted SMA patients. A nonradioactive quantitative PCR test showed one
SMN1
copy in 19 patients (45%). By sequencing cloned reverse-transcription (RT) PCR products or genomic fragments of
SMN1
, we identified nine different mutations in 18 of the 19 patients, six described for the first time: three missense mutations (Y272C, T274I, S262I), three frameshift mutations in exons 2a, 2b, and 4 (124insT, 241-242ins4, 591delA), one nonsense mutation in exon 1 (Q15X), one Alu-mediated deletion from intron 4 to intron 6, and one donor splice site mutation in intron 7 (c.922+6T-->G). The most frequent mutation, Y272C, was found in 6 (33%) of 18 patients. Each intragenic mutation found in at least two patients occurred on the same haplotype background, indicating founder mutations. Genotype-phenotype correlation allowed inference of the effect of each mutation on the function of the
SMN1
protein and the role of the
SMN2
copy number in modulating the SMA phenotype. In 14 of 23 SMA patients with two
SMN1
copies, at least one intact
SMN1
copy was sequenced, which excludes a 5q-SMA and suggests the existence of further gene(s) responsible for approximately 4%-5% of phenotypes indistinguishable from SMA. We determined the validity of the test, and we discuss its practical implications and limitations.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis of survival motor neuron copies: identification of subtle SMN1 mutations in patients with spinal muscular atrophy, genotype-phenotype correlation, and implications for genetic counseling. 1199 67
Spinal muscular atrophy is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by motor neurone loss, muscle atrophy and weakness. Deletion or mutation of the
SMN1
gene reduces intracellular survival motor neurone protein levels causes spinal muscular atrophy, most likely by interfering with spliceosome assembly. A range of clinical severity and corresponding survival motor neurone levels is seen because of the presence of copies of the transcriptionally inefficient
SMN2
gene and possibly other modifying genes. The delineation of
SMN1
as the gene that causes spinal muscular atrophy and the identification of genes that modify spinal muscular atrophy raise the prospect of gene therapy or in-vivo gene activation treatment for this frequently fatal disorder.
...
PMID:Spinal muscular atrophy: molecular pathophysiology. 1022 44
SMN1
and
SMN2
(
survival motor neuron
) encode identical proteins. A critical question is why only the homozygous loss of
SMN1
, and not
SMN2
, results in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Analysis of transcripts from
SMN1
/
SMN2
hybrid genes and a new
SMN1
mutation showed a direct relationship between presence of disease and exon 7 skipping. We have reported previously that the exon-skipped product SMNDelta7 is partially defective for self-association and SMN self-oligomerization correlated with clinical severity. To evaluate systematically which of the five nucleotides that differ between
SMN1
and
SMN2
effect alternative splicing of exon 7, a series of SMN minigenes was engineered and transfected into cultured cells, and their transcripts were characterized. Of these nucleotide differences, the exon 7 C-to-T transition at codon 280, a translationally silent variance, was necessary and sufficient to dictate exon 7 alternative splicing. Thus, the failure of
SMN2
to fully compensate for
SMN1
and protect from SMA is due to a nucleotide exchange (C/T) that attenuates activity of an exonic enhancer. These findings demonstrate the molecular genetic basis for the nature and pathogenesis of SMA and illustrate a novel disease mechanism. Because individuals with SMA retain the
SMN2
allele, therapy targeted at preventing exon 7 skipping could modify clinical outcome.
...
PMID:A single nucleotide in the SMN gene regulates splicing and is responsible for spinal muscular atrophy. 1033 83
Proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by mutations in the telomeric (
SMNT
), but not centromeric (
SMNC
),
survival motor neuron
gene. Here we have identified and analyzed the two SMN promoters. We show that a 750-bp 5'-flanking fragment from each is capable of driving expression from a reporter construct. Within this fragment, we define a approximately 200-bp element that results in high expression in a motor neuron cell line. Sequence comparison of a 3. 4-kb upstream fragment from each gene shows minimal differences. Although these differences produce a 2-fold difference in reporter activity between the two promoters, this is not sufficiently high to explain why
SMNT
, but not
SMNC
, is the disease determining gene. Our data thus demonstrate, for the first time, almost complete equivalence between the SMN promoters and rule out the important possibility that differences in them might explain why mutations in only the telomeric SMN gene cause SMA.
...
PMID:Promoter analysis of the human centromeric and telomeric survival motor neuron genes (SMNC and SMNT). 1036 16
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a recessive disorder characterized by loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord. It is caused by mutations in the telomeric
survival motor neuron
1 (
SMN1
) gene. Alterations within an almost identical copy gene, the centromeric
survival motor neuron
2 (
SMN2
) gene produce no known phenotypic effect. The exons of the two genes differ by just two nucleotides, neither of which alters the encoded amino acids. At the genomic level, only five nucleotides that differentiate the two genes from one another have been reported. The entire genomic sequence of the two genes has not been determined. Thus, differences which might explain why
SMN1
is the SMA gene are not readily apparent. In this study, we have completely sequenced and compared genomic clones containing the SMN genes. The two genes show striking similarity, with the homology being unprecedented between two different yet functional genes. The only critical difference in an approximately 32 kb region between the two SMN genes is the C->T base change 6 bp inside exon 7. This alteration but not other variations in the SMN genes affects the splicing pattern of the genes. The majority of the transcript from the
SMN1
locus is full length, whereas the majority of the transcript produced by the
SMN2
locus lacks exon 7. We suggest that the exon 7 nucleotide change affects the activity of an exon splice enhancer. In SMA patients, the loss of
SMN1
but the presence of
SMN2
results in low levels of full-length SMN transcript and therefore low SMN protein levels which causes SMA.
...
PMID:A single nucleotide difference that alters splicing patterns distinguishes the SMA gene SMN1 from the copy gene SMN2. 1036 62
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