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ATAVISTIC "WEREWOLF" GENE LOCALIZED
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
HOUSTON, TX 6/95 - The localization of a gene for a
rare hair growth disorder provides new information on the genetics of
hair growth and highlights the phenomenon of atavistic expression of dormant
genes.
Congenital generalized hypertrichosis (CGH) is an extremely
rare disorder characterized by excessive hair growth on the face
and upper body for which reason it has been dubbed "Werewolf
syndrome" by the popular press. Individuals with this rare
phenotype have in the past appeared in circuses as "dog men" and
"ape men".
The discovery of a multigenerational Mexican family with
many members manifesting the phenotype provided researchers a
rare opportunity to track the gene. Previous studies had shown
an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance with CGH.
Segregation analysis revealed that affected women transmitted the
trait to both male and female offspring. The hair growth is more
extreme in males, while affected females have a more patchy
pattern of excessive hair growth. These observations led
researchers to postulate an X-linked dominant pattern of
inheritance.
Medical geneticists obtained DNA from the blood all family
members available. The congenital nature of the disease, the
complete penetrance and easily identifiable phenotype facilitated
the classification of individuals for linkage analysis. They
performed two-point and multi-point linkage analysis using 45
polymorphic markers along the X-chromosome.
After isolating the genomic DNA the researchers genotyped it
using PCR based hypervariable microsatellites. Using these
techniques the investigators localized the gene to an interval in
Xq24-q27.1 region of the X-chromosome. These findings indicate
that CGH is a fully penetrant X-linked dominant trait.
Although the CGH phenotype is very rare, the underlying gene, when identified,
may have significant applications in the treatment of inherited baldness
and in the identification of other genes associated with hypertrichosis,
noted Dr. Pragna Patel, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX.
The next step may be to further expand pedigree by studying more family
members. However, the candidate gene approach will probably be more effective
than the classic positional cloning approach. Systematic analysis of expressed
sequences within contigs of yeast artificial chromosomes should yield
a number of potential candidate genes, she said.
Hair growth is controlled by a complex interaction of
genetic and endocrine factors. Most forms of excess hairiness are
associated with hormone imbalances involving sites under androgen
control and are known as hirsutism. Hypertrichosis, in
contrast, can involve any area of the body and can have an
acquired or genetic cause.
Little is known in general about autosomal or X-linked genes
that control hair growth. The fact that non-human primates have
considerably more hair coverage suggests that these genes have
undergone important structural or regulatory changes during
evolution in humans.
The current findings should help understand the processes
that control hair growth at the molecular level. Current research
suggests that retinoic acids and growth factors all appear to be
involved in production of hair.
However, there is much that remains unknown. Several key
molecules involved in hair growth have yet to be identified. Also
unknown are the mechanisms for distribution of hair. Humans are
unique in that they can grow three different kinds of hair from
the same follicles at different times ( vellus-short, fine hairs;
lanugo-long and fine hairs; terminal hair- very long and thick
hair. GCH can involve any of these.
"Identification of the genes involved in the rare human
hypertrichoses may shed light on the peculiarities of humans in
this regard. The presence of additional abnormalities in people
with related kinds of hypertrichoses indicate that the underlying
genes may not only be involved in the control of hair growth but
may also affect additional organs and tissues," said Dr. Patel.
Dr. Patel postulated that genes involved may encode growth
factors and their receptors, adhesion molecules or important
enzymes involved in the metabolism of connective tissue.
CGH is a manifestation of a genetic atavism- reappearance of
an ancestral phenotype. The reappearance of ancestral
characteristics in individual members of the species "reminds us
that the genetic and developmental information originally used in
the production of such characteristics has not been lost during
evolution, but lies quiescent within the genome and in the
processes of embryonic development," notes Brian K. Hall,
department of biology, University of Halifax, NS.
This particular genetic mutation evoked a pattern long
forgotten. The loss of legs on snakes or tails in humans, does
not mean the ability to make these structures has been lost. This
CGH atavism represents an ancestral pattern of a structure still
present in the species. In contrast, the appearance of three toed
horses and whales with hind limbs represents the reappearance of
lost structures, he said.
"Atavisms, long an embarrassment to evolutionary biologists,
are now seen as potent evidence of how much genetic potential is
retained, and how long developmental programs persist after
particular structure has disappeared from the species," said Dr.
Hall.
In addition to observing spontaneous appearances of atavisms
in nature, they can also be revealed through artificial breeding
and selection; by experimental manipulations such as grafting
embryonic tissues between embryos of different species or the
production of transgenic animals.
For more information, see Nature Genetics, v.10, 6/95,
Figurea et al., pp. 202-207; and pp. 126-127, Hall et al.
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