1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in genes encoding ribonuclease H2 subunits cause Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and mimic congenital viral brain infection

Mutations in genes encoding ribonuclease H2 subunits cause Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and mimic congenital viral brain infection

  • Nat Genet. 2006 Aug;38(8):910-6. doi: 10.1038/ng1842.
Yanick J Crow 1 Andrea Leitch Bruce E Hayward Anna Garner Rekha Parmar Elen Griffith Manir Ali Colin Semple Jean Aicardi Riyana Babul-Hirji Clarisse Baumann Peter Baxter Enrico Bertini Kate E Chandler David Chitayat Daniel Cau Catherine Déry Elisa Fazzi Cyril Goizet Mary D King Joerg Klepper Didier Lacombe Giovanni Lanzi Hermione Lyall María Luisa Martínez-Frías Michèle Mathieu Carole McKeown Anne Monier Yvette Oade Oliver W Quarrell Christopher D Rittey R Curtis Rogers Amparo Sanchis John B P Stephenson Uta Tacke Marianne Till John L Tolmie Pam Tomlin Thomas Voit Bernhard Weschke C Geoffrey Woods Pierre Lebon David T Bonthron Chris P Ponting Andrew P Jackson
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Leeds Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Leeds, St. James's University Hospital, Leeds, LS9 7TF, UK. yanickcrow@mac.com
Abstract

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is an autosomal recessive neurological disorder, the clinical and immunological features of which parallel those of congenital viral Infection. Here we define the composition of the human ribonuclease H2 Enzyme complex and show that AGS can result from mutations in the genes encoding any one of its three subunits. Our findings demonstrate a role for ribonuclease H in human Neurological Disease and suggest an unanticipated relationship between ribonuclease H2 and the Antiviral immune response that warrants further investigation.

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