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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Autosomal dominant disease ; Cone dystrophy ; Cerebellar atrophy ; Multiple system atrophy ; Linkage
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We describe a family with an autosomal dominant form of retinal-cerebellar atrophy. There is an extreme variability in age of onset and severity of the clinical symptoms: some patients remain nearly asymptomatic throughout their entire life; others develop severe retinal and cerebellar symptoms after the age of 35 years; others suffer from a severe disorder with onset in adolescence and death during the third decade of life; in others the onset is in early childhood with prevalence of cerebellar symptoms. There is neither dementia nor epilepsy in any of the patients. Four out of five autopsies showed a severe retinal atrophy, and all five autopsies were also characterized by (1) a cerebellar atrophy affecting the spinocerebellar and olivocerebellar tracts, the cerebellar cortex and the efferent cerebellar pathways, (2) an involvement of the pyramidal pathways and of the motor neurons of brain stem and spinal cord, and (3) an atrophy of the subthalamic nucleus and to a much lesser extent of the pallidum, with also some damage to the substantia nigra. The posterior columns are much less affected except in one patient. In this family, we have excluded linkage with the two loci for spinocerebellar ataxia, i.e., SCA1 on chromosome 6p and SCA2 on chromosome 12q as well as with the locus for Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) on chromosome 14q. A genome-wide search is currently being performed to detect the disease locus responsible.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1459
    Keywords: Key words Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 ; Peripheral myelin protein 22 ; Polymorphism ; Mutation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract It is controversial if peripheral myelin protein 22 gene (PMP22) Thr 118Met represents a functionally irrelevant polymorphism or, since hemizygosity for this variant has been found in two patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1 (CMT1 patients), it can act as a recessive CMT1 mutation. To shed further light on this variant and its diagnostic value we searched for carriers in 1018 individuals from the German general population, in 104 probands with hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) who were carriers of the 1.5-Mb deletion frequently associated with this disorder, in 187 patients with the 1.5-Mb duplication, and in 22 patients with a CMT1 phenotype who did not have any detectable anomaly in the PMP22 gene. Using allele-specific PCR we identified 14 [allele frequency (AF)=0.007] in the German general population, one (AF=0.01) in the HNPP group and six (AF=0.016) and two (AF=0.05) carriers of the PMP22 Thr118Met mutation in the CMT1 groups with and without gene defect. Carriers from all groups showed nerve conduction velocities which did not differ from typical values for these groups. We conclude that the hemizygous occurrence of the 118Met allele does not usually cause CMT1. Because of previous reports on its association with disease, and because its allele product shows abnormalities in in vitro expression systems, it seems possible that this mutation, together with yet unidentified factors, predisposes to CMT1. Alternatively, previously reported disease associations occurred by chance, and the 118Met allele causes biochemical abnormalities irrelevant for CMT1 formation. In either case this mutation is not a clinically relevant disease marker.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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