Mutations in the very low-density lipoprotein receptor VLDLR cause cerebellar hypoplasia and quadrupedal locomotion in humans
Date
2008Source Title
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Print ISSN
1091-6490
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Volume
105
Issue
11
Pages
4232 - 4236
Language
English
Type
ArticleItem Usage Stats
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Abstract
Quadrupedal gait in humans, also known as Unertan syndrome, is a rare phenotype associated with dysarthric speech, mental retardation, and varying degrees of cerebrocerebellar hypoplasia. Four large consanguineous kindreds from Turkey manifest this phenotype. In two families (A and D), shared homozygosity among affected relatives mapped the trait to a 1.3-Mb region of chromosome 9p24. This genomic region includes the VLDLR gene, which encodes the very low-density lipoprotein receptor, a component of the reelin signaling pathway involved in neuroblast migration in the cerebral cortex and cerebellum. Sequence analysis of VLDLR revealed nonsense mutation R257X in family A and single-nucleotide deletion c2339delT in family D. Both these mutations are predicted to lead to truncated proteins lacking transmembrane and signaling domains. In two other families (B and C), the phenotype is not linked to chromosome 9p. Our data indicate that mutations in VLDLR impair cerebrocerebellar function, conferring in these families a dramatic influence on gait, and that hereditary disorders associated with quadrupedal gait in humans are genetically heterogeneous.
Keywords
GeneticsUnertan syndrome
membrane protein
nucleotide
reelin
very low density lipoprotein receptor
adult
aged
article
brain cortex
brain function
cell migration
cerebellum
cerebellum hypoplasia
chromosome 9p
chromosome 9p24
family
female
gait
gait disorder
gene
gene mapping
gene mutation
genetic disorder
genetic trait
genomics
homozygosity
human
male
neuroblast
nonsense mutation
nucleotide sequence
phenotype
prediction
priority journal
protein domain
quadruped gait
relative
sequence analysis
Turkey (republic)