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Publication : Mouse and hamster mutants as models for Waardenburg syndromes in humans.

First Author  Asher JH Jr Year  1990
Journal  J Med Genet Volume  27
Issue  10 Pages  618-26
PubMed ID  2246770 Mgi Jnum  J:200892
Mgi Id  MGI:5509459 Doi  10.1136/jmg.27.10.618
Citation  Asher JH Jr, et al. (1990) Mouse and hamster mutants as models for Waardenburg syndromes in humans. J Med Genet 27(10):618-26
abstractText  Four different Waardenburg syndromes have been defined based upon observed phenotypes. These syndromes are responsible for approximately 2% of subjects with profound congenital hearing loss. At present, Waardenburg syndromes have not been mapped to particular human chromosomes. One or more of the mouse mutant alleles, Ph (patch), s (piebald), Sp (splotch), and Mior (microphthalmia-Oak Ridge) and the hamster mutation Wh (anophthalmic white) may be homologous to mutations causing Waardenburg syndromes. In heterozygotes, phenotypic effects of these four mouse mutations and the hamster mutation are similar to the phenotypes produced by different Waardenburg syndrome mutations. The chromosomal locations and syntenic relationships associated with three of the four mouse mutant genes have been used to predict human chromosomal locations for Waardenburg syndromes: (1) on chromosome 2q near FN1 (fibronectin 1), (2) on chromosome 3p near the proto-oncogene RAF1 or 3q near RHO (rhodopsin), and (3) on chromosome 4p near the proto-oncogene KIT. Waardenburg syndromes show extensive intrafamilial phenotypic variability. Results of our studies with the hamster mutation Wh suggest that this variability may be explained in part by modifier genes segregating within families.
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