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Abstract
Van Buchem disease is an autosomal recessive skeletal dysplasia characterised by generalised
bone overgrowth, predominantly in the skull and mandible. Clinical complications including
facial nerve palsy, optic atrophy, and impaired hearing occur in most patients. These
features are very similar to those of sclerosteosis and the two conditions are only
differentiated by the hand malformations and the tall stature appearing in sclerosteosis.
Using an extended Dutch inbred van Buchem family and two inbred sclerosteosis families,
we mapped both disease genes to the same region on chromosome 17q12-q21, supporting
the hypothesis that van Buchem disease and sclerosteosis are caused by mutations in
the same gene. In a previous study, we positionally cloned a novel gene, called SOST,
from the linkage interval and identified three different, homozygous mutations in
the SOST gene in sclerosteosis patients leading to loss of function of the underlying
protein. The present study focuses on the identification of a 52 kb deletion in all
patients from the van Buchem family. The deletion, which results from a homologous
recombination between Alu sequences, starts approximately 35 kb downstream of the
SOST gene. Since no evidence was found for the presence of a gene within the deleted
region, we hypothesise that the presence of the deletion leads to a down regulation
of the transcription of the SOST gene by a cis regulatory action or a position effect.