Mutations of mitochondrial DNA polymerase gammaA are a frequent cause of autosomal dominant or recessive progressive external ophthalmoplegia.
Lamantea E, Tiranti V, Bordoni A, Toscano A, Bono F, Servidei S, Papadimitriou A, Spelbrink H, Silvestri L, Casari G, Comi GP, Zeviani M
Annals of neurology (2002), Volume 52, Page 211
Incomplete polymerases:
Abstract:
One form of familial progressive external ophthalmoplegia with multiple mitochondrial DNA deletions recently has been associated with mutations in POLG1, the gene encoding pol gammaA, the catalytic subunit of mitochondrial DNA polymerase. We screened the POLG1 gene in several PEO families and identified five different heterozygous missense mutations of POLG1 in 10 autosomal dominant families. Recessive mutations were found in three families. Our data show that mutations of POLG1 are the most frequent cause of familial progressive external ophthalmoplegia associated with accumulation of multiple mitochondrial DNA deletions, accounting for approximately 45% of our family cohort.
Polymerases:
Human Pol gamma R309L,Human Pol gamma G848S,Human Pol gamma G923D,Human Pol gamma R943H,Human Pol gamma Y955C,Human Pol gamma A957S,Human Pol gamma T251I,Human Pol gamma S1176L
Topics:
Status:
new | topics/pols set | partial results | complete | validated |
Results:
No results available for this paper.