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Location of gene for Gorlin syndrome.

Farndon, P A; Del Mastro, R G; Evans, D G; Kilpatrick, M W

Lancet. 1992;339(8793):581-2.

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Abstract

The Gorlin (naevoid-basal-cell-carcinoma) syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by multiple naevoid basal-cell carcinomas, recurrent odontogenic keratocysts, skeletal anomalies, intracranial calcification, and developmental malformations. Characterisation of the gene that causes the syndrome may improve our understanding of the pathogenesis of other basal-cell carcinomas. By linkage analysis, we have shown that the gene is located on chromosome 9q22.3-q31; the most likely position is between DNA markers D9S12 and D9S53. Location of the gene for Gorlin syndrome offers the possibility that DNA markers can be used in risk estimation and presymptomatic identification of patients for surveillance.

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Published date:
Journal title:
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Place of publication:
ENGLAND
Volume:
339
Issue:
8793
Pagination:
581-2
Pubmed Identifier:
1347096
Funder acknowledgement:
Access state:
Active

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University researcher(s):

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Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:210813
Created by:
Evans, Gareth
Created:
12th October, 2013, 14:16:09
Last modified by:
Evans, Gareth
Last modified:
12th October, 2013, 14:16:09

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