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Publication : Epileptic seizures caused by inactivation of a novel gene, jerky, related to centromere binding protein-B in transgenic mice.

First Author  Toth M Year  1995
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  11
Issue  1 Pages  71-5
PubMed ID  7550318 Mgi Jnum  J:28398
Mgi Id  MGI:76016 Doi  10.1038/ng0995-71
Citation  Toth M, et al. (1995) Epileptic seizures caused by inactivation of a novel gene, jerky, related to centromere binding protein-B in transgenic mice [published erratum appears in Nat Genet 1996 Jan;12(1):110]. Nat Genet 11(1):71-5
abstractText  Epidemiological data and genetic studies indicate that certain forms of human epilepsy are inherited. Based on the similarity between the human and mouse genomes, mouse models of epilepsy could facilitate the discovery of genes associated with epilepsy syndromes. Here, we report an insertional murine mutation that inactivates a novel gene and results in whole body jerks, generalized clonic seizures, and epileptic brain activity in transgenic mice. The gene, named jerky, encodes a putative 41.7 kD protein displaying homology to a number of nuclear regulatory proteins, suggesting that perhaps the jerky protein is able to bind DNA.
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