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Huntington disease without CAG expansion: phenocopies or errors in assignment?
- Source :
-
American journal of human genetics [Am J Hum Genet] 1994 May; Vol. 54 (5), pp. 852-63. - Publication Year :
- 1994
-
Abstract
- Huntington disease (HD) has been shown to be associated with an expanded CAG repeat within a novel gene on 4p16.3 (IT15). A total of 30 of 1,022 affected persons (2.9% of our cohort) did not have an expanded CAG in the disease range. The reasons for not observing expansion in affected individuals are important for determining the sensitivity of using repeat length both for diagnosis of affected patients and for predictive testing programs and may have biological relevance for the understanding of the molecular mechanism underlying HD. Here we show that the majority (18) of the individuals with normal sized alleles represent misdiagnosis, sample mix-up, or clerical error. The remaining 12 patients represent possible phenocopies for HD. In at least four cases, family studies of these phenocopies excluded 4p16.3 as the region responsible for the phenotype. Mutations in the HD gene that are other than CAG expansion have not been excluded for the remaining eight cases; however, in as many as seven of these persons, retrospective review of these patients' clinical features identified characteristics not typical for HD. This study shows that on rare occasions mutations in other, as-yet-undefined genes can present with a clinical phenotype very similar to that of HD.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Aged
Base Sequence
Chromosome Mapping
Cohort Studies
DNA blood
DNA genetics
Diagnostic Errors
Family
Female
Humans
Huntington Disease epidemiology
Leukocytes metabolism
Male
Middle Aged
Mutation
Pedigree
Phenotype
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 4
Huntington Disease diagnosis
Huntington Disease genetics
Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0002-9297
- Volume :
- 54
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- American journal of human genetics
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 8178825