Characterization of a new BLM mutation associated with a topoisomerase II alpha defect in a patient with Bloom's syndrome.
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| Abstract | :
Bloom's syndrome (BS), a human recessive disorder associated with an increased risk of malignancy, arises through mutations in both alleles of the BLM gene, which was recently identified as a member of the RecQ helicase family. BS cells are characterized by an increased rate of sister chromatid exchange (SCE). However, a subpopulation of lymphocytes exhibiting a normal level of SCE is observed in some patients. It has been proposed that reversion to a low-SCE phenotype involves an intragenic crossing over between the paternal and maternal BLM alleles, generating a wild-type allele. In this study we characterize a new BLM mutation in a BS patient leading to the replacement, in the C-terminal region of Blm, of a highly conserved cysteine by a phenylalanine in codon 1036. Moreover, our data show that this patient also inherited a BLM allele carrying a mutation affecting its expression and that a somatic intragenic crossing over was involved in reversion to the low-SCE phenotype. Further, we show that both topoisomerase II alpha mRNA and protein levels are decreased in the high-SCE cells derived from this patient, whereas they are normal in the corresponding low-SCE cells. Altogether, our data led us to propose that besides its putative helicase activity, Blm could be involved in transcription regulation. |
| Year of Publication | :
1997
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| Journal | :
Human molecular genetics
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| Volume | :
6
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| Issue | :
9
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| Number of Pages | :
1427-34
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| ISSN Number | :
0964-6906
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| URL | :
https://academic.oup.com/hmg/article-lookup/doi/10.1093/hmg/6.9.1427
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| DOI | :
10.1093/hmg/6.9.1427
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| Short Title | :
Hum Mol Genet
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