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Heterogeneity within a large kindred with frontotemporal dementia: a novel progranulin mutation

Authors :
John Hardy
Francesca Frangipane
Ekaterina Rogaeva
Silvana Geracitano
Gianfranco Puccio
Carmine Tomaino
Yosuke Wakutani
S. Pradella
Livia Bernardi
M. Anfossi
Amalia C. Bruni
Christine Sato
P. St. George-Hyslop
Parastoo Momeni
Rosanna Colao
Raffaele Maletta
T. Kawarai
Maria Mirabelli
Nicoletta Smirne
Andrew Kertesz
Joshua W. Elder
A. Costanzo
Sabrina A.M. Curcio
Maura Gallo
Source :
Neurology. 69(2)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Background: Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) in several 17q21-linked families was recently explained by truncating mutations in the progranulin gene ( GRN ). Objective: To determine the frequency of GRN mutations in a cohort of Caucasian patients with FTD without mutations in known FTD genes. Methods: GRN was sequenced in a series of 78 independent FTD patients including 23 familial subjects. A different Calabrian dataset (109 normal control subjects and 96 FTD patients) was used to establish the frequency of the GRN mutation. Results: A novel truncating GRN mutation (c.1145insA) was detected in a proband of an extended consanguineous Calabrian kindred. Segregation analysis of 70 family members revealed 19 heterozygous mutation carriers including 9 patients affected by FTD. The absence of homozygous carriers in a highly consanguineous kindred may indicate that the loss of both GRN alleles might lead to embryonic lethality. An extremely variable age at onset in the mutation carriers (more than five decades apart) is not explained by APOE genotypes or the H1/H2 MAPT haplotypes. Intriguingly, the mutation was excluded in four FTD patients belonging to branches with an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance of FTD, suggesting that another novel FTD gene accounts for the disease in the phenocopies. It is difficult to clinically distinguish phenocopies from GRN mutation carriers, except that language in mutation carriers was more severely compromised. Conclusion: The current results imply further genetic heterogeneity of frontotemporal dementia, as we detected only one GRN -linked family (about 1%). The value of discovering large kindred includes the possibility of a longitudinal study of GRN mutation carriers.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X
Volume :
69
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f03ecc110fc922bde08a3aeab258c89e