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Cell Press, American Journal of Human Genetics, 1(76), p. 172-179, 2005

DOI: 10.1086/426953

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Mapping a Mendelian Form of Intracranial Aneurysm to 1p34.3-p36.13

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The identification of pathways that underlie common disease has been greatly impacted by the study of rare families that segregate single genes with large effect. Intracranial aneurysm is a common neurological problem; the rupture of these aneurysms constitutes a frequently catastrophic neurologic event. The pathogenesis of these aneurysms is largely unknown, although genetic and environmental factors are believed to play a role. Previous genomewide studies in affected relative pairs have suggested linkage to several loci, but underlying genes have not been identified. We have identified a large kindred that segregates nonsyndromic intracranial aneurysm as a dominant trait with high penetrance. Genomewide analysis of linkage was performed using a two-stage approach: an analysis of ~10,000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the 6 living affected subjects, followed by the genotyping of simple tandem repeats across resulting candidate intervals in all 23 kindred members. Analysis revealed significant linkage to a single locus, with a LOD score of 4.2 at 1p34.3-p36.13 under a dominant model with high penetrance. These findings identify a Mendelian form of intracranial aneurysm and map the location of the underlying disease locus.