Journal article

Evidence that WT1 mutations in denys - drash syndrome patients may act in a dominant-negative fashion

MH Little, KA Williamson, M Mannens, A Kelsey, C Gosden, ND Hastie, VV Heyningen

Human Molecular Genetics | OXFORD UNIV PRESS UNITED KINGDOM | Published : 1993

Abstract

The triad of nephropathy, partial gonadal dysgenesis and Wilms' tumour (WT) is known as Denys - Drash syndrome (DDS). The WT predisposition gene WT1, which plays a vital role in both genital and renal development, is known to be mutated in DDS patients. The WT1 mutations in these patients are constitutional point mutations clustered in the zinc finger (ZF) encoding exons, particularly the exons encoding ZF2 and ZF3. The predicted functional alteration in WT1 is thought to underlie DDS aetiology either by abolishing binding of the WT1 ZF domain to its normal target DNA binding site(s), perhaps blocking the binding of the wild type WT1 present (dominant negative mutation), and/or by conferring..

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University of Melbourne Researchers