PVRL1 as a candidate gene for nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate: no evidence for the involvement of common or rare variants in southern Han Chinese patients

The poliovirus receptor related-1 (PVRL1) gene encodes nectin-1, a cell-cell adhesion molecule (OMIM #600644), and is mutated in the cleft lip with or without cleft palate/ectodermal dysplasia-1 syndrome (CLPED1, OMIM #225000). In addition, PVRL1 mutations have been associated with nonsyndromic clef...

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Veröffentlicht in:DNA and cell biology 2012-07, Vol.31 (7), p.1321-1327
Hauptverfasser: Cheng, Hong-Qiu, Huang, En-Min, Xu, Ming-Yan, Shu, Shen-You, Tang, Shi-Jie
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The poliovirus receptor related-1 (PVRL1) gene encodes nectin-1, a cell-cell adhesion molecule (OMIM #600644), and is mutated in the cleft lip with or without cleft palate/ectodermal dysplasia-1 syndrome (CLPED1, OMIM #225000). In addition, PVRL1 mutations have been associated with nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without a cleft palate (NSCL/P) in studies of multiethnic samples. To investigate the possible involvement of this gene in southern Han Chinese NSCL/P patients, we performed (i) a case-control association study, and (ii) a resequencing study. A set of 470 patients with NSCL/P and 693 controls were recruited, and a total of 45 tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were genotyped by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. In the resequencing study, the coding regions of the PVRL1 α isoform were direct sequenced in 45 trios from multiply affected families. One (rs7128327) of the 45 tested SNPs showed a trend toward statistical significance in the genotypic-level chi-square test (p = 0.009567). However, this result did not withstand correction for multiple testing. Likewise, sliding window haplotype analyses consisting of two, three, or four SNPs failed to detect any positive association. Resequencing analysis also failed to identify any novel rare sequence variants. In conclusion, the present study provided no support for the hypothesis that common or rare variants in PVRL1 play a significant role in NSCL/P development in the southern Han Chinese population. This is the first study that has used tagging SNPs covering all the coding and noncoding regions to search for common NSCL/P-associated mutations of PVRL1.
ISSN:1044-5498
1557-7430
DOI:10.1089/dna.2011.1556