Papers

Peer-reviewed
1996

Somatic mosaicism of expanded CAG repeats in brains of patients with dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy: Cellular population-dependent dynamics of mitotic instability

American Journal of Human Genetics
  • H. Takano
  • O. Onodera
  • H. Takahashi
  • S. Igarashi
  • M. Yamada
  • M. Oyake
  • T. Ikeuchi
  • R. Koide
  • H. Tanaka
  • K. Iwabuchi
  • S. Tsuji
  • Display all

Volume
58
Number
6
First page
1212
Last page
1222
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)

Dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease caused by unstable expansion of a CAG repeat in the DRPLA gene. We performed detailed quantitative analysis of the size and the size distribution (range) of the expanded CAG repeats in various regions of the CNS of eight autopsied patients with DRPLA. Expanded alleles (AE) showed considerable variations in size, as well as in range, depending on the region of the CNS, whereas normal alleles did not show such variations, which indicates the occurrence of somatic mosaicism of AE in the CNS. The AE in the cerebellar cortex were consistently smaller by two to five repeat units than those in the cerebellar white matter. Moreover, the AE in the cerebral cortex were smaller by one to four repeat units than those in the cerebral white matter. These results suggest that the smaller AE in the cerebellar and cerebral cortices represent those of neuronal cells. The ranges of the AE in the cerebral cortex, cerebral white matter, and cerebellar white matter showed considerable variation ranging from 9 to 23 repeat units, whereas those in the cerebellar cortex showed little variance and were ~7 repeat units. The ranges of the AE in the cerebral cortex, cerebral white matter, and cerebellar white matter were much broader in patients with higher ages at death than they were in patients with lower ages at death, raising the possibility that the range of AE increases with time, as the result of mitotic instability of AE.

Link information
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8651298
ID information
  • ISSN : 0002-9297
  • Pubmed ID : 8651298
  • SCOPUS ID : 0029988921

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