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New Huntington disease mutation arising from a paternal CAG34 allele showing somatic length variation in serially passaged lymphoblasts

✍ Scribed by Milena Cannella; Vittorio Maglione; Tiziana Martino; Maria Simonelli; Giuseppe Ragona; Ferdinando Squitieri


Book ID
101451545
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
140 KB
Volume
133B
Category
Article
ISSN
1552-4841

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The analysis of somatic CAG triplet variation in lymphoblastoid cell lines from subjects carrying alleles of intermediate length (IA~33CAG~ and IA~34CAG~) in Huntington disease (HD) gene disclosed instability in the DNA of the person, from whom a new expansion mutation of 45 triplets originated. The triplet size increased after about 30 passages in cell cultures in lymphoblasts with the IA~34~ genotype. Lymphoblasts may provide an appropriate model for studying repeat instability in subjects with poly(CAG) repeat disorders. HD shows somatic, in addition to germ‐line instability, highlighting the propensity to somatic CAG variation in human cells even with repeat numbers under the expanded edge. Factors potentially cis acting with the mutation, other than those reported in this study (CCG polymorphic stretch, the deletion of the glutamic acid residue at position 2642 and the 4‐codon segment between CAG and CCG polymorphisms), should be searched for and analyzed. © 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.