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Parental repeat length instability in myotonic dystrophy type 1 pre- and protomutations

Authors :
Isis B.T. Joosten
Debby M.E.I. Hellebrekers
Catharina G. Faber
Monique M. Gerrits
Christine E. M. de Die-Smulders
Bianca T. A. de Greef
Hubert J.M. Smeets
Klinische Neurowetenschappen
RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
MUMC+: DA KG Lab Centraal Lab (9)
RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience
MUMC+: KIO Kemta (9)
RS: GROW - R4 - Reproductive and Perinatal Medicine
RS: FHML MaCSBio
Klinische Genetica
MUMC+: DA KG Polikliniek (9)
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Neurologie (9)
Source :
Eur J Hum Genet, European Journal of Human Genetics, 28(7), 956-962. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is caused by a CTG trinucleotide repeat expansion on chromosome 19q13.3. While DM1 premutation (36–50 repeats) and protomutation (51–80 repeats) allele carriers are mostly asymptomatic, offspring is at risk of inheriting expanded, symptom-associated, (CTG)n repeats of n > 80. In this study we aimed to evaluate the intergenerational instability of DM1 pre- and protomutation alleles, focussing on the influence of parental gender. One hundred and forty-six parent–child pairs (34 parental premutations, 112 protomutations) were retrospectively selected from the DM1 patient cohort of the Maastricht University Medical Center+. CTG repeat size of parents and children was determined by (triplet-primed) PCR followed by fragment length analysis and Southern blot analysis. Fifty-eight out of eighty-one (71.6%) paternal transmissions led to a (CTG)n repeat of n > 80 in offspring, compared with 15 out of 65 (23.1%) maternal transmissions (p < 0.001). Repeat length instability occurred for paternal (CTG)n repeats of n ≥ 45, while maternal instability did not occur until (CTG)n repeats reached a length of n ≥ 71. Transmission of premutations caused (CTG)n repeats of n > 80 in offspring only when paternally transmitted (two cases), while protomutations caused (CTG)n repeats of n > 80 in offspring in 71 cases, of which 56 (78.9%) were paternally transmitted. In conclusion, our data show that paternally transmitted pre- and protomutations were more unstable than maternally transmitted pre- and protomutations. For genetic counseling, this implies that males with a small DMPK mutation have a higher risk of symptomatic offspring compared with females. Consequently, we suggest addressing sex-dependent factors in genetic counseling of small-sized CTG repeat carriers.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10184813
Volume :
28
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ede2f1263d2e5fcb4ccb5ad0d522013b