1. Mucolipidosis type IV is caused by mutations in a gene encoding a novel transient receptor potential channel
- Author
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Matthew C. Bromley, James W. Nagle, Matthew W. Colman, Raphael Schiffmann, Ehud Goldin, James S. Acierno, John C. Kennedy, Susan A. Slaugenhaupt, Mei Sun, Catherine Bove, Stefanie Stahl, Christine R. Kaneski, and John L. Falardeau
- Subjects
Male ,TRPV4 ,TRPV5 ,Molecular Sequence Data ,TRPM Cation Channels ,Biology ,Transient Receptor Potential Channels ,Gene mapping ,Mucolipidoses ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene family ,TRPM2 ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,TRPM1 ,MCOLN1 ,Expressed Sequence Tags ,Membrane Proteins ,General Medicine ,Physical Chromosome Mapping ,medicine.disease ,Haplotypes ,Mutation ,Female ,Mucolipidosis type IV ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 19 ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
Mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV) is a developmental neurodegenerative disorder characterized by severe neurologic and ophthalmologic abnormalities. The MLIV gene, ML4 (MCOLN1), has recently been localized to chromosome 19p13.2-13.3 by genetic linkage. Here we report the cloning of a novel transient receptor potential cation channel gene and show that this gene is mutated in patients with the disorder. ML4 encodes a protein, which we propose to call mucolipin, which has six predicted transmembrane domains and is a member of the polycystin II subfamily of the Drosophila transient receptor potential gene family. The role of a potential receptor-stimulated cation channel defect in the pathogenesis of mucolipidosis IV is discussed.
- Published
- 2000