ELUCIDATION OF THE SEQUENCE AND THE GENOMIC ORGANIZATION OF THE HUMANDENTIN MATRIX ACIDIC PHOSPHOPROTEIN-1 (DMP1) GENE - EXCLUSION OF THE LOCUS FROM A CAUSATIVE ROLE IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF DENTINOGENESIS IMPERFECTA TYPE-II
Kl. Hirst et al., ELUCIDATION OF THE SEQUENCE AND THE GENOMIC ORGANIZATION OF THE HUMANDENTIN MATRIX ACIDIC PHOSPHOPROTEIN-1 (DMP1) GENE - EXCLUSION OF THE LOCUS FROM A CAUSATIVE ROLE IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF DENTINOGENESIS IMPERFECTA TYPE-II, Genomics, 42(1), 1997, pp. 38-45
The dentin matrix acidic phosphoprotein 1 (DMP1) gene has been mapped
to human chromosome 4q21 and shown to exhibit no recombination with th
e autosomal dominant disorder of dentin formation, dentinogenesis impe
rfecta type II. In the current study, sequencing of DMP1 cDNA and geno
mic clones has indicated that the human gene contains an open reading
frame of 1539 bp, which predicts a highly acidic, serine-rich protein
of 513 amino acids. Comparison of the human DMP1-coding sequence with
that of the rat, mouse, and cow indicated that the predicted protein c
ontains a conserved hydrophobic signal peptide sequence and an Arg-Gly
-Asp cell attachment sequence. The gene is encoded by six exons, the s
plicing phase of which is type 0, the first exon containing solely 5'
untranslated sequence. Sequencing of each of the coding exons in indiv
iduals affected by dentinogenesis imperfecta type II failed to reveal
any disease-specific mutations, suggesting that mutations in DMP1 are
not causative of this condition at least in the two families examined
in this study. (C) 1997 Academic Press.