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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (
Friedreich's ataxia
)
2,098
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the past few years, a new type of genetic mutation, expansion of trinucleotide repeats, has been shown to cause neurologic disease. This new class of mutations was first identified in 1991 as the underlying genetic defect in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy and the fragile X syndrome, and in recent years, trinucleotide repeat expansions have been found to be the causative mechanism in 10 other neurologic diseases. These mutations are produced by heritable unstable DNA and are termed "dynamic mutations" because of changes in the number of repeat units inherited from generation to generation. In the normal population, these repeat units, although polymorphic, are stably inherited. To date four types of trinucleotide repeat expansions have been identified: (1) long cytosine-guanine-guanine (CGG) repeats in the two fragile X syndromes (FRAXA and
FRAXE
), (2) long cytosine-thymine-guanine (CTG) repeat expansions in myotonic dystrophy, (3) long guanine-adenine-adenine repeat expansions in
Friedreich's ataxia
and (4) short cytosine-adenine-guanine repeat expansions (CAG) which are implicated in eight neurodegenerative disorders and are the focus of this review. Diseases that are caused by trinucleotide repeat expansions exhibit a phenomenon called anticipation that can not be explained by conventional Mendelian genetics. Anticipation is defined as increase in the severity of disease with an earlier age of onset of symptoms in successive generations. Anticipation is often influenced by the sex of the transmitting parent, and for most CAG repeat disorders, the disease is more severe when paternally transmitted. The severity and the age of onset of the disease have been correlated with the size of the repeats on mutant alleles, with the age of onset being inversely correlated with the size of the expansion. In all eight disorders caused by CAG repeat expansion, the repeat is located within the coding region of the gene involved and in all cases it is translated into a stretch of polyglutamines in the respective proteins. All the proteins are unrelated outside of the polyglutamine stretch and most are novel with exception of the androgen receptor and the voltage gated alpha 1A calcium channel, which are mutated in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy and spinocerebellar ataxia type 6. It is intriguing that the proteins are ubiquitously expressed in both peripheral and nervous tissue but in each disorder only a select population of nerve cells are targeted for degeneration as a consequence of the expanded CAG repeat. Current thinking among scientists working on the molecular mechanisms of neurodegeneration in these diseases is that the presence of an expanded polyglutamine confers a gain of function onto the involved protein. To understand the mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of these diseases, investigators have turned to generating transgenic mice which recapitulate some of the features of the human disease and hence are excellent model systems to study the progression of the disease in vivo.
...
PMID:The CAG/polyglutamine tract diseases: gene products and molecular pathogenesis. 921 76
The discovery of unstable DNA sequences as the cause of genetic disease is a fascinating new area in human genetics, raising a number of important questions addressing the understanding of both the mechanisms and the effects of this new type of mutation. Trinucleotide repeat expansion mutations have been identified in a number of neurodegenerative diseases, including spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), fragile X syndrome (FRAXA and
FRAXE
), myotonic dystrophy (DM), Huntington's disease (HD), spinocerebellar ataxia types 1, 2, 3, 6, 7 (SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA6, SCA7), dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA),
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
) and autosomal dominant pure spastic paraplegia (ADPSP). They have been traced to genetic variation in the length of (CTG)n/(CAG)n, (CGG)n/(CCG)n, or (GAA)n/(TTC)n triplet repeats in DNA. In normal individuals these loci contain a short length of triplet repeats (usually 5-40), which is polymorphic within the population. Increases in the lengths of the translated triplet repeats to 40-100 are associated with disease symptoms, whereas the untranslated triplet repeats to 200-3000 are associated with the disease. We concentrated on repeat expansions in myotonic dystrophy. In this symposium, we outline the molecular aspects of myotonic dystrophy including DNA diagnosis and anticipation, and review the similarities and differences among these triplet repeat diseases.
...
PMID:[Genomic instability and neurodegenerative disease]. 1006 64
Fragile X mental retardation syndrome,
FRAXE
mental retardation, Progressive myoclonus epilepsy Type I, and
Friedreich ataxia
are members of a larger group of genetic disorders known as the Repeat Expansion Diseases. Unlike other members of this group, these four disorders all result from a primary defect in the initiation or elongation of transcription. In this review, we discuss current models for the relationship between the expanded repeat and the disease symptoms.
...
PMID:Transcription defects induced by repeat expansion: fragile X syndrome, FRAXE mental retardation, progressive myoclonus epilepsy type 1, and Friedreich ataxia. 1452 65
Friedreich ataxia
, myotonic dystrophy type 1 and 3 forms of intellectual disability, fragile X syndrome,
FRAXE
mental retardation, and FRA12A mental retardation are repeat expansion diseases caused by expansion of CTG.CAG, GAA.TTC, or CGG.CCG repeat tracts. These repeats are transcribed but not translated. They are located in different parts of different genes and cause symptoms that range from ataxia and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy to muscle wasting, male infertility, and mental retardation, yet recent reports suggest that, despite these differences, the repeats may share a common property, namely the ability to initiate repeat-mediated epigenetic changes that result in heterochromatin formation.
...
PMID:Chromatin remodeling in the noncoding repeat expansion diseases. 1895 31