Description:
BLOOM SYNDROME; BLM
RECQ PROTEIN-LIKE 3; RECQL3
Repository
|
NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository
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Subcollection |
Heritable Diseases Hereditary Cancers Chromosome Abnormalities |
Class |
Repair Defective and Chromosomal Instability Syndromes |
Class |
Syndromes with Increased Chromosome Breakage |
Cell Type
|
Fibroblast
|
Transformant
|
Untransformed
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Race
|
White
|
Ethnicity
|
ASHKENAZI
|
Family Member
|
1
|
Relation to Proband
|
proband
|
Confirmation
|
Clinical summary/Case history
|
Species
|
Homo sapiens
|
Common Name
|
Human
|
Remarks
|
|
Passage Frozen |
26 |
|
IDENTIFICATION OF SPECIES OF ORIGIN |
Species of Origin Confirmed by Nucleoside Phosphorylase,Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase, and Lactate Dehydrogenase Isoenzyme Electrophoresis |
|
Gene |
RECQL3 |
Chromosomal Location |
15q26.1 |
Allelic Variant 1 |
604610.0001; BLOOM SYNDROME |
Identified Mutation |
6-BP DEL/7-BP INS; In 4 ostensibly unrelated persons of Jewish ancestry, Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] found homozygosity for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion at nucleotide 2281 of the BLM cDNA. Deletion of ATCTGA and insertion of TAGATTC caused the insertion of the novel codons for LDSR after amino acid 736, and after these codons there was a stop codon. Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] concluded that a person carrying this deletion/insertion mutation was a founder of the Ashkenazi-Jewish population, and that nearly all Ashkenazi Jews with Bloom syndrome inherited the mutation identical by descent from this common ancestor. |
|
Gene |
RECQL3 |
Chromosomal Location |
15q26.1 |
Allelic Variant 2 |
604610.0001; BLOOM SYNDROME |
Identified Mutation |
6-BP DEL/7-BP INS; In 4 ostensibly unrelated persons of Jewish ancestry, Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] found homozygosity for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion at nucleotide 2281 of the BLM cDNA. Deletion of ATCTGA and insertion of TAGATTC caused the insertion of the novel codons for LDSR after amino acid 736, and after these codons there was a stop codon. Ellis et al. [Cell 83: 655 (1995)] concluded that a person carrying this deletion/insertion mutation was a founder of the Ashkenazi-Jewish population, and that nearly all Ashkenazi Jews with Bloom syndrome inherited the mutation identical by descent from this common ancestor. |
Remarks |
Clinically affected; B.S. Registry #53; increased frequency of sister chromatid exchange in fibroblasts; donor subject is homozygous for a 6-bp deletion/7-bp insertion [6-bp del/7-bp ins] at nucleotide 2,281 of the open reading frame of the RECQL3 gene, which results in a frameshift and a stop codon. |
Doman JL, Pandey S, Neugebauer ME, An M, Davis JR, Randolph PB, McElroy A, Gao XD, Raguram A, Richter MF, Everette KA, Banskota S, Tian K, Tao YA, Tolar J, Osborn MJ, Liu DR, Phage-assisted evolution and protein engineering yield compact, efficient prime editors Cell186:3983-4002.e26 2023 |
PubMed ID: 37657419 |
|
Trikka D, Fang Z, Renwick A, Jones SH, Chakraborty R, Kimmel M, Nelson DL, Complex SNP-based haplotypes in three human helicases: implications for cancer association studies. Genome Res12(4):627-39 2002 |
PubMed ID: 11932247 |
|
Lu X, Lane DP, Differential induction of transcriptionally active p53 following UV or ionizing radiation: defects in chromosome instability syndromes? Cell75:765-78 1993 |
PubMed ID: 8242748 |
Passage Frozen |
26 |
Split Ratio |
1:2 |
Temperature |
37 C |
Percent CO2 |
5% |
Percent O2 |
3% |
Medium |
Eagle's Minimum Essential Medium with Earle's salts and non-essential amino acids with 2mM L-glutamine or equivalent |
Serum |
10% fetal bovine serum Not inactivated |
Substrate |
None specified |
Subcultivation Method |
trypsin-EDTA |
Supplement |
- |
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