Disruption Of A Long-Range Cis-Acting Regulator For Shh Causes Preaxial Polydactyly
Date
2002Author
Lettice, LA
Horikoshi, T
Heaney, SJH
van Baren, MJ
van der Linde, HC
Breedveld, GJ
Joosse, M
Akarsu, N
Oostra, BA
Endo, N
Shibata, M
Suzuki, M
Takahashi, E
Shinka, T
Nakahori, Y
Ayusawa, D
Nakabayashi, K
Scherer, SW
Heutink, P
Hill, RE
Noji, S
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Preaxial polydactyly (PPD) is a common limb malformation in human. A number of polydactylous mouse mutants indicate that misexpression of Shh is a common requirement for generating extra digits. Here we identify a translocation breakpoint in a PPD patient and a transgenic insertion site in the polydactylous mouse mutant sasquatch (Ssq). The genetic lesions in both lie within the same respective intron of the LMBR1/Lmbr1 gene, which resides approximate to1 Mb away from Shh. Genetic analysis of Ssq reveals that the Lmbr1 gene is incidental to the phenotype and that the mutation directly interrupts a cis-acting regulator of Shh. This regulator is most likely the target for generating PPD mutations in human.