This invention relates to methods and compositions useful for detecting
mutations which cause Familial Dysautonomia. Familial dysautonomia (FD;
Riley-Day syndrome), an Ashkenazi Jewish disorder, is the best known and
most frequent of a group of congenital sensory neuropathies and is
characterized by widespread sensory and variable autonomic dysfunction.
Previously, we mapped the FD gene, DYS, to a 0.5 cM region of chromosome
9q31 and showed that the ethnic bias is due to a founder effect, with
>99.5% of disease alleles sharing a common ancestral haplotype. To
investigate the molecular basis of FD, we sequenced the minimal candidate
region and cloned and characterized its 5 genes. One of these, IKBKAP,
harbors two mutations that can cause FD. The major haplotype mutation is
located in the donor splice site of intron 20. This mutation can result
in skipping of exon 20 in the mRNA from FD patients, although they
continue to express varying levels of wild-type message in a
tissue-specific manner. RNA isolated from patient lymphoblasts is
primarily wild-type, whereas only the deleted message is seen in RNA
isolated from brain. The mutation associated with the minor haplotype in
four patients is a missense (R696P) mutation in exon 19 that is predicted
to disrupt a potential phosphorylation site. Our findings indicate that
almost all cases of FD are caused by an unusual splice defect that
displays tissue-specific expression; and they also provide the basis for
rapid carrier screening in the Ashkenazi Jewish population.