Recurrence of osteogenesis imperfecta because of paternal mosaicism: Gly862→Ser substitution in a type I collagen gene (COL1A1)

1995 
We determined that two siblings with type III osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) had the same single base substitution that converted the codon for glycine (Gly) 862 to a codon for serine (Ser) in exon 44 of the α1 chain of the type I (α 1(I)) collagen gene (COL1A1). The mutation was also detected in various paternal tissues; the mutant allele accounted for approximately 11% of the COL1A1 alleles in blood, 24% of those in fibroblasts, and 43% of those in sperm determined by allele-specific colony hybridization using amplified genomic sequences. These findings demonstrate that germ-line mosaicism in the phenotypically normal father is responsible for the recurrence. There is a cluster of serine substitutions for Gly (Gly832, Gly844 and Gly901) which is associated with nonlethal phenotypes and which is located between two lethal clusters. In the cases studied here, a Gly862→Ser mutation was identified that is located inside the nonlethal cluster.
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