Volume 57, Issue 2 pp. 344-347
III. Molecular Biological Studies
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Genome-wide search for CLN2, the gene causing late-infantile neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (LNCL)

Dr. J. L. Haines

Corresponding Author

Dr. J. L. Haines

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown

Neurology Department, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Building 149 13th St., Charlestown, MA 02129Search for more papers by this author
R.-M. N. Boustany

R.-M. N. Boustany

Division of Pediatric Neurology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina

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T. Worster

T. Worster

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown

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M. Ter-Minassian

M. Ter-Minassian

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown

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P. Jondro

P. Jondro

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown

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T. J. Lerner

T. J. Lerner

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, The Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown

Neurology Department, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

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First published: 5 June 1995

Abstract

The loci for the juvenile (CLN3) and infantile (CLN1) neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) types have been mapped by genetic linkage analysis to chromosome arms 16p and 1p, respectively. The late-infantile defect CLN2 has not yet been mapped, although linkage analysis with tightly linked markers excludes it from both the JNCL and INCL loci. We have initiated a genome-wide search for the LNCL gene, taking advantage of the large collection of highly polymorphic markers that has been developed through the Human Genome Initiative. The high degree of heterozygosity of these markers makes it feasible to carry out successful linkage analysis in small nuclear families, such as found in LNCL. Our current collection of LNCL pedigrees includes 19 US families and 11 Costa Rican families. To date, we have completed typing with over 50 markers on chromosomes 2, 9, 13, and 18–22. The results of this analysis formally exclude about 10% of the human genome as the location of the LNCL gene. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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