Artigo Revisado por pares

Increased instability of intermediate alleles in families with sporadic Huntington disease compared to similar sized intermediate alleles in the general population

1995; Oxford University Press; Volume: 4; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/hmg/4.10.1911

ISSN

1460-2083

Autores

Y. Paul Goldberg, Cynthia T. McMurray, Jutta Zeisier, E. Almqvist, David Sillence, Flona Richards, A. Marquis Gacy, Janet A. Buchanan, Håkan Telenius, Michael R. Hayden,

Tópico(s)

Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases

Resumo

We have directly compared intergenerational stability of intermediate alleles (IAs) derived from new muta tion families (IANM) for Huntington disease (HD) with IAs in the general population (IAGP) which occur in ∼1 in 50 persons. Analysis of meiotic events in blood and sperm reveals that IANM are significantly more unstable than IAGP despite similar size. However, for both IANM and IAGP CAG changes were small and risks for inheriting an expansion into the HD affected range were low. Sequence analysis reveals that the CAG tract is generally interrupted by a penultimate CAA in IAGP IANM and alleles in the affected range. In one new mutation family, however, two A→G mutations result In a pure CAG tract which is associated with very marked instability. These mutations alter the predicted DNA hairpin structure with a predicted increase in the likelihood of large expansion, supporting the model that hairpin loop formation plays an important role in trinucleotide instability.

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