• Neurosurgery · Jun 1996

    Genetic heterogeneity of inherited cerebral cavernous malformation.

    • M Günel, I A Awad, K Finberg, G K Steinberg, H D Craig, O Cepeda, C Nelson-Williams, and R P Lifton.
    • Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
    • Neurosurgery. 1996 Jun 1; 38 (6): 1265-71.

    ObjectiveCerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is frequently an inherited disorder showing autosomal dominant transmission. Genetic analysis has localized a gene causing CCM to a segment of the long arm of human chromosome 7 (7q). This evidence derives from investigation of a small number of families, mostly of Hispanic American descent. In this study, we have tested whether inherited CCM is always due to mutation in this 7q gene, or whether mutation in other genes can cause CCM.MethodsWe have studied subjects from two non-Hispanic families with inherited CCM. The clinical features of CCM in these families are indistinguishable from those in kindreds in which CCM is due to mutation in the 7q gene. To test whether CCM in these kindreds is caused by a mutation on 7q, we compared the inheritance of CCM to the inheritance of genetic markers on 7q.ResultsGenetic analysis demonstrates independent inheritance of CCM and markers on 7q in both families studied. This evidence excludes mutation in the 7q gene as the cause of CCM in these families, with odds against CCM being due to mutation in 7q in each family of more than 100,000:1 and 100:1, respectively.ConclusionThese findings demonstrate that inherited CCM is not always caused by a mutant gene on 7q, indicating the presence of at least a second gene in which mutation can cause CCM. These results have implications for genetic testing and the pathogenesis of this disorder.

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