Linkage of Niemann-Pick Disease Type D to the Same Region of Human Chromosome 18 as Niemann-Pick Disease Type C
1997
Niemann-Pick type II disease is a severe disorder characterized by accumulation of tissue cholesterol and sphingomyelin and by progressive degeneration of the nervous system. This disease has two clinically similar subtypes, type C (NPC) and type D (NPD). NPC is clinically variable and has been identified in many ethnic groups. NPD, on the other hand, has been reported only in descendants of an Acadian couple who lived in Nova Scotia in the early 18th century and has a more homogeneous expression resembling that of less severely affected NPC patients. Despite biochemical differences, it has not been established whether NPC and NPD are allelic variants of the same disease. We report here that NPD is tightly linked (recombination fraction .00; maximum LOD score 4.50) to a microsatellite marker, D18S480, from the centromeric region of chromosome 18q. Carstea et al. have reported that the NPC gene maps to this same site; therefore we suggest that NPC and NPD likely result from mutations in the same gene.
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