Interferon Regulatory Factor 6 ( <i>IRF6</i> ) Gene Variants and the Risk of Isolated Cleft Lip or Palate

Theresa M. Zucchero(University of Iowa), Margaret E. Cooper(University of Pittsburgh), Brion S. Maher(University of Pittsburgh), Sandra Daack‐Hirsch(University of Iowa), Buena Nepomuceno, Lucilene Arilho Ribeiro(Universidade de São Paulo), Diana Caprau(University of Iowa), Kaare Christensen(University of Southern Denmark), Yasushi Suzuki(Aichi Gakuin University), Junichiro Machida(Aichi Gakuin University), Nagato Natsume(Aichi Gakuin University), Koh-ichiro Yoshiura(Nagasaki University), Alexandre R. Vieira(University of Iowa), Iêda M. Orioli(Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro), Eduardo E. Castilla(Fundação Oswaldo Cruz), Lina M. Moreno(University of Iowa), Mauricio Arcos‐Burgos(Universidad de Antioquia), Andrew C. Lidral(University of Iowa), L. Leigh Field(University of British Columbia), You-e Liu(ShangHai JiAi Genetics & IVF Institute), Ajit Kisor Ray(University of Toronto), Toby Goldstein(University of Pittsburgh), R.E. Schultz(University of Iowa), Min Shi(University of Iowa), Marla Johnson(University of Iowa), Shinji Kondo(University of Iowa), Brian C. Schutte(University of Iowa), Mary L. Marazita(University of Pittsburgh), Jeffrey C. Murray(University of Southern Denmark)
New England Journal of Medicine
August 18, 2004
Cited by 583Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cleft lip or palate (or the two in combination) is a common birth defect that results from a mixture of genetic and environmental factors. We searched for a specific genetic factor contributing to this complex trait by examining large numbers of affected patients and families and evaluating a specific candidate gene. METHODS: We identified the gene that encodes interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) as a candidate gene on the basis of its involvement in an autosomal dominant form of cleft lip and palate, Van der Woude's syndrome. A single-nucleotide polymorphism in this gene results in either a valine or an isoleucine at amino acid position 274 (V274I). We carried out transmission-disequilibrium testing for V274I in 8003 individual subjects in 1968 families derived from 10 populations with ancestry in Asia, Europe, and South America, haplotype and linkage analyses, and case-control analyses, and determined the risk of cleft lip or palate that is associated with genetic variation in IRF6. RESULTS: Strong evidence of overtransmission of the valine (V) allele was found in the entire population data set (P<10(-9)); moreover, the results for some individual populations from South America and Asia were highly significant. Variation at IRF6 was responsible for 12 percent of the genetic contribution to cleft lip or palate and tripled the risk of recurrence in families that had already had one affected child. CONCLUSIONS: DNA-sequence variants associated with IRF6 are major contributors to cleft lip, with or without cleft palate. The contribution of variants in single genes to cleft lip or palate is an important consideration in genetic counseling.


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