A New Role for LOC101928437 in Non-Syndromic Intellectual Disability: Findings from a Family-Based Association Test

Non-syndromic intellectual disability (NSID) is mental retardation in persons of normal physical appearance who have no recognisable features apart from obvious deficits in intellectual functioning and adaptive ability; however, its genetic etiology of most patients has remained unknown. The main pu...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-08, Vol.10 (8), p.e0135669-e0135669
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Shaohe, Shi, Zhangyan, Cui, Meng, Li, Junlin, Ma, Zhe, Shi, Yuanyu, Zheng, Zijian, Zhang, Fuchang, Jin, Tianbo, Geng, Tingting, Chen, Chao, Guo, Yale, Zhou, Jianping, Huang, Shaoping, Guo, Xingli, Gao, Lin, Gong, Pingyuan, Gao, Xiaocai, Zhang, Kejin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Non-syndromic intellectual disability (NSID) is mental retardation in persons of normal physical appearance who have no recognisable features apart from obvious deficits in intellectual functioning and adaptive ability; however, its genetic etiology of most patients has remained unknown. The main purpose of this study was to fine map and identify specific causal gene(s) by genotyping a NSID family cohort using a panel of markers encompassing a target region reported in a previous work. A total of 139 families including probands, parents and relatives were included in the household survey, clinical examinations and intelligence tests, recruited from the Qinba mountain region of Shannxi province, western China. A collection of 34 tagged single nucleotide polymorphisms (tSNPs) spanning five microsatellite marker (STR) loci were genotyped using an iPLEX Gold assay. The association between tSNPs and patients was analyzed by family-based association testing (FBAT) and haplotype analysis (HBAT). Four markers (rs5974392, rs12164331, rs5929554 and rs3116911) in a block that showed strong linkage disequilibrium within the first three introns of the LOC101928437 locus were found to be significantly associated with NSID (all P
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0135669