Analysis of Australian Crohn's disease pedigrees refines the localization for susceptibility to inflammatory bowel disease on chromosome 16

Juleen A. Cavanaugh(Canberra Hospital), David F. Callen(Women's and Children's Hospital), Susan R. Wilson(Australian National University), Prudence M. Stanford(Canberra Hospital), M. Sraml(Canberra Hospital), Marta Górska(Canberra Hospital), Joanna Crawford(Women's and Children's Hospital), S.A. Whitmore(Women's and Children's Hospital), C. SHLEGEL(Canberra Hospital), Simon J. Foote(Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research), Maija R.J. Kohonen‐Corish(Australian National University), Paul Pavli(Canberra Hospital)
Annals of Human Genetics
July 1, 1998
Cited by 112Open Access
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Abstract

A number of localizations for the putative susceptibility gene(s) have been identified for both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. In a genome wide scan, Hugot et al. (1996) identified a region on chromosome 16 which appeared to be responsible for the inheritance of inflammatory bowel disease in a small proportion of families. Subsequent work has suggested that this localization is important for susceptibility to Crohn's disease rather than ulcerative colitis (Ohmen et al. 1996; Parkes et al. 1996). We investigated the contribution of this localization to the inheritance of inflammatory bowel disease in 54 multiplex Australian families, and confirmed its importance in a significant proportion of Crohn's disease families; we further refined the localization to a region near to D16S409, obtaining a maximum LOD score of 6.3 between D16S409 and D16S753.


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