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Screening a UK amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cohort provides evidence of multiple origins of the C9orf72 expansion

Authors :
Fratta, Pietro
Polke, James M.
Newcombe, Jia
Mizielinska, Sarah
Lashley, Tammaryn
Poulter, Mark
Beck, Jon
Preza, Elisavet
Devoy, Anny
Sidle, Katie
Howard, Robin
Malaspina, Andrea
Orrell, Richard W.
Clarke, Jan
Lu, Ching-Hua
Mok, Kin
Collins, Toby
Shoaii, Maryam
Nanji, Tina
Wray, Selina
Adamson, Gary
Pittman, Alan
Renton, Alan E.
Traynor, Bryan J.
Sweeney, Mary G.
Revesz, Tamas
Houlden, Henry
Mead, Simon
Isaacs, Adrian M.
Fisher, Elizabeth M.C.
Source :
Neurobiology of Aging
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

An expanded hexanucleotide repeat in the C9orf72 gene is the most common genetic cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (C9ALS/FTD). Although 0–30 hexanucleotide repeats are present in the general population, expansions >500 repeats are associated with C9ALS/FTD. Large C9ALS/FTD expansions share a common haplotype and whether these expansions derive from a single founder or occur more frequently on a predisposing haplotype is yet to be determined and is relevant to disease pathomechanisms. Furthermore, although cases carrying 50–200 repeats have been described, their role and the pathogenic threshold of the expansions remain to be identified and carry importance for diagnostics and genetic counseling. We present clinical and genetic data from a UK ALS cohort and report the detailed molecular study of an atypical somatically unstable expansion of 90 repeats. Our results across different tissues provide evidence for the pathogenicity of this repeat number by showing they can somatically expand in the central nervous system to the well characterized pathogenic range. Our results support the occurrence of multiple expansion events for C9ALS/FTD.

Details

ISSN :
15581497
Volume :
36
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of aging
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....f4a2a83b0f109b9e4c4402b659f8f170