There is no significant difference in the normal and "gray zone" alleles of the FMR1 repeat in these patients compared with the normal population ( 2 β«Χ‘β¬ 0.45, df β«Χ‘β¬ 1, P > 0.1). Normal stability during transmission was found in all 25 available families.
Instability of the FMR2 trinucleotide repeat region associated with expanded FMR1 alleles
β Scribed by Brown, T. C.; Tarleton, J. C.; Go, R. C. P.; Longshore, J. W.; Descartes, M.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 62 KB
- Volume
- 73
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
- DOI
- 10.1002/(sici)1096-8628(19971231)73:4<447::aid-ajmg14>3.0.co;2-r
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β¦ Synopsis
The fragile sites FRAXA and FRAXE, located βΌ600 kb apart on Xq27.3 and Xq28, respectively, are due to a CGG trinucleotide repeat expansion. Although the expansion mechanism for these and other trinucleotide repeat disorders remains unknown, the similarities between the FRAXA and FRAXE regions suggest a possible association between the 2 sites. DNA from 953 individuals was analyzed to determine the distribution of FRAXE repeat sizes in this population and to ascertain potential association between FRAXA and FRAXE repeat sizes. Thirty-four FMR2 alleles ranging from 3-42 repeats were identified. No FRAXE expansions were found in this population, supporting previous findings that FRAXE expansions are rare. However, in the fragile X syndrome affected group, a FMR2 delection, 2 cases of FRAXE repeat instability and a FRAXE mosaic male were identified. Also, a previously identified, rare FMR2 polymorphism was observed. Statistical analyis showed no correlation between normal FRAXA and FRAXE repeat sizes studied, although there was a significant size difference in larger FMR2 alleles that segregated with expanded FMR1 alleles. These findings support the idea of an association between repeat expansion in the FMR1 gene and instability or deletions in the FMR2 gene.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Fig. 1. Typical results obtained for the amplification of the FMR2 GCCrepeat locus from dried blood spots. A: Products were amplified using the protocol described by Knight et al. [1993]; B: Products were amplified using the nested PCR protocol described in the text.
We report on the allele distribution in a normal Chilean population at 2 microsatellite loci neighbouring the FRAXA locus and at the CGG repeat in the 5 end of the FMR-1 gene, which causes the fragile X syndrome. The most common CGG repeat allele was 30 (41.7%), with 29 being second most common (30.
With the rationale that a disease that presents with anticipation could be associated with expansion of trinucleotide repeats, we selected parent-offspring pairs of schizophrenia patients with earlier age at onset in the filial generation to measure the expansion of CAG repeats using the repeat expa