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Publication : X-linked situs abnormalities result from mutations in ZIC3.

First Author  Gebbia M Year  1997
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  17
Issue  3 Pages  305-8
PubMed ID  9354794 Mgi Jnum  J:59280
Mgi Id  MGI:1351289 Doi  10.1038/ng1197-305
Citation  Gebbia M, et al. (1997) X-linked situs abnormalities result from mutations in ZIC3 [see comments]. Nat Genet 17(3):305-8
abstractText  Vertebrates position unpaired organs of the chest and abdomen asymmetrically along the left-right (LR) body axis. Each structure comes to lie non-randomly with respect to the midline in an overall position designated situs solitus, exemplified in humans by placement of the heart, stomach and spleen consistently to the left. Aberrant LR axis development can lead to randomization of individual organ position (situs ambiguus) or to mirror-image reversal of all lateralized structures (situs inversus). Previously we mapped a locus for situs abnormalities in humans, HTX1, to Xq26.2 by linkage analysis in a single family (LR1) and by detection of a deletion in an unrelated situs ambiguus male (Family LR2; refs 2,3). From this chromosomal region we have positionally cloned ZIC3, a gene encoding a putative zinc-finger transcription factor. One frameshift, two missense and two nonsense mutations have been identified in familial and sporadic situs ambiguus. The frameshift allele is also associated with situs inversus among some heterozygous females, suggesting that ZIC3 functions in the earliest stages of LR-axis formation. ZIC3, which has not been previously implicated in vertebrate LR-axis development, is the first gene unequivocally associated with human situs abnormalities.
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