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A Pan- European Study of the C9orf72 Repeat Associated with FTLD: Geographic Prevalence, Genomic Instability, and Intermediate Repeats.

Authors :
van der Zee, Julie
Gijselinck, Ilse
Dillen, Lubina
Van Langenhove, Tim
Theuns, Jessie
Engelborghs, Sebastiaan
Philtjens, Stéphanie
Vandenbulcke, Mathieu
Sleegers, Kristel
Sieben, Anne
Bäumer, Veerle
Maes, Githa
Corsmit, Ellen
Borroni, Barbara
Padovani, Alessandro
Archetti, Silvana
Perneczky, Robert
Diehl‐Schmid, Janine
de Mendonça, Alexandre
Miltenberger‐Miltenyi, Gabriel
Source :
Human Mutation; Feb2013, Vol. 34 Issue 2, p363-373, 11p
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

ABSTRACT We assessed the geographical distribution of C9orf72 G<subscript>4</subscript> C<subscript>2</subscript> expansions in a pan- European frontotemporal lobar degeneration ( FTLD) cohort ( n = 1,205), ascertained by the European Early- Onset Dementia ( EOD) consortium. Next, we performed a meta-analysis of our data and that of other European studies, together 2,668 patients from 15 Western European countries. The frequency of the C9orf72 expansions in Western Europe was 9.98% in overall FTLD, with 18.52% in familial, and 6.26% in sporadic FTLD patients. Outliers were Finland and Sweden with overall frequencies of respectively 29.33% and 20.73%, but also Spain with 25.49%. In contrast, prevalence in Germany was limited to 4.82%. In addition, we studied the role of intermediate repeats (7-24 repeat units), which are strongly correlated with the risk haplotype, on disease and C9orf72 expression. In vitro reporter gene expression studies demonstrated significantly decreased transcriptional activity of C9orf72 with increasing number of normal repeat units, indicating that intermediate repeats might act as predisposing alleles and in favor of the loss-of-function disease mechanism. Further, we observed a significantly increased frequency of short indels in the GC-rich low complexity sequence adjacent to the G<subscript>4</subscript> C<subscript>2</subscript> repeat in C9orf72 expansion carriers ( P < 0.001) with the most common indel creating one long contiguous imperfect G<subscript>4</subscript> C<subscript>2</subscript> repeat, which is likely more prone to replication slippage and pathological expansion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10597794
Volume :
34
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Human Mutation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
85189478
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.22244