A founder mutation in the γ-sarcoglycan gene of Gypsies possibly predating their migration out of India

F Piccolo, M Jeanpierre, F Leturcq… - Human molecular …, 1996 - academic.oup.com
F Piccolo, M Jeanpierre, F Leturcq, C Dode, K Azibi, A Toutain, L Merlini, L Jarre, C Navarro…
Human molecular genetics, 1996academic.oup.com
We investigated the molecular basis of a severe form of early onset autosomal recessive
muscular dystrophy with sarcoglycan (SG) deficiency in seven large Gypsy families living in
different parts of Western Europe and apparently not closely related. They were linked to the
LGMD2C locus (13q12) suggesting a primary defect in the γ-SG gene coding for the 35 kDa
dystrophinassociated glycoprotein. All of the 18 investigated patients were homozygous for
the same G→ A transition in codon 283 producing the replacement of a conserved cysteine …
Abstract
We investigated the molecular basis of a severe form of early onset autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy with sarcoglycan (SG) deficiency in seven large Gypsy families living in different parts of Western Europe and apparently not closely related. They were linked to the LGMD2C locus (13q12) suggesting a primary defect in the γ-SG gene coding for the 35 kDa dystrophinassociated glycoprotein. All of the 18 investigated patients were homozygous for the same G→A transition in codon 283 producing the replacement of a conserved cysteine of the extra-cellular domain of the protein by a tyrosine. All affected chromosomes in homozygous and heterozygous relatives carried the same allele 5 of the intragenic marker D13S232. Flanking markers were studied to delineate a common ancestral haplotype, the size of which was used to compute the date of the founding mutation. We found evidence that the mutation occurred between 60 and 200 generations ago, therefore possibly predating the commonly accepted date of migration of the Gypsy ancestors out of India.
Oxford University Press