OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the presence of Machado-Joseph disease (MJD, also spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 [SCA3]) among Australian aborigines was caused by a new mutational event or by the introduction of expanded alleles from other populations. DESIGN: We sequenced a region of 4 kilobases (kb), encompassing the CAG repeat within the ATXN3 gene, in 2 affected Australian aboriginal families and compared them with the Joseph and Machado lineages described before. Full-extended haplotypes (including also more distant single-nucleotide polymorphisms and flanking short tandem repeats) were assessed by segregation and allele-specific amplification. A phylogenetic tree was inferred from genetic distances, and age of the Australasian Joseph-derived lineage was estimated. SETTING: The aboriginal communities of Groote Eylandt and Yirrkala, in the Northern Territories, Australia (local ethics institutional permission was granted, and both community and individual informed consent was obtained). SUBJECTS: A convenience sample of 19 patients and unaffected relatives, from 2 Australian aboriginal families affected with MJD; 40 families with MJD of multiethnic origins and 50 unrelated Asian control subjects. RESULTS: The 2 aboriginal families shared the same full haplotype, including 20 single-nucleotide polymorphisms:TTGATCGAGC-(CAG)(Exp)-CACCCAGCGC, that is, the Joseph lineage with a G variant in rs56268847.Among 33 families with the Joseph lineage, this derived haplotype was found only in 5 of 16 Taiwanese, all 3 Indian,and 1 of 3 Japanese families analyzed. CONCLUSION: A related-extended MJD haplotype shared by Australian aborigines and some Asian families (a Joseph-derived lineage) suggests a common ancestor for all, dating back more than 7000 years.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the presence of Machado-Joseph disease (MJD, also spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 [SCA3]) among Australian aborigines was caused by a new mutational event or by the introduction of expanded alleles from other populations. DESIGN: We sequenced a region of 4 kilobases (kb), encompassing the CAG repeat within the ATXN3 gene, in 2 affected Australian aboriginal families and compared them with the Joseph and Machado lineages described before. Full-extended haplotypes (including also more distant single-nucleotide polymorphisms and flanking short tandem repeats) were assessed by segregation and allele-specific amplification. A phylogenetic tree was inferred from genetic distances, and age of the Australasian Joseph-derived lineage was estimated. SETTING: The aboriginal communities of Groote Eylandt and Yirrkala, in the Northern Territories, Australia (local ethics institutional permission was granted, and both community and individual informed consent was obtained). SUBJECTS: A convenience sample of 19 patients and unaffected relatives, from 2 Australian aboriginal families affected with MJD; 40 families with MJD of multiethnic origins and 50 unrelated Asian control subjects. RESULTS: The 2 aboriginal families shared the same full haplotype, including 20 single-nucleotide polymorphisms:TTGATCGAGC-(CAG)(Exp)-CACCCAGCGC, that is, the Joseph lineage with a G variant in rs56268847.Among 33 families with the Joseph lineage, this derived haplotype was found only in 5 of 16 Taiwanese, all 3 Indian,and 1 of 3 Japanese families analyzed. CONCLUSION: A related-extended MJD haplotype shared by Australian aborigines and some Asian families (a Joseph-derived lineage) suggests a common ancestor for all, dating back more than 7000 years.
Authors: Shamsideen Abayomi Ogun; Sandra Martins; Philip B Adebayo; Clara O Dawodu; Jorge Sequeiros; Michael F Finkel Journal: Eur J Hum Genet Date: 2014-04-30 Impact factor: 4.246
Authors: Maxinne Watchon; Kristy C Yuan; Nick Mackovski; Adam J Svahn; Nicholas J Cole; Claire Goldsbury; Silke Rinkwitz; Thomas S Becker; Garth A Nicholson; Angela S Laird Journal: J Neurosci Date: 2017-07-07 Impact factor: 6.167
Authors: Jennifer J Carr; Joyce Lalara; Gayangwa Lalara; Gloria O'Hare; Libby Massey; Nick Kenny; Kate E Pope; Alan R Clough; Anne Lowell; Ruth N Barker Journal: PLoS One Date: 2019-03-11 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Yanetza González-Zaldívar; Yaimeé Vázquez-Mojena; José M Laffita-Mesa; Luis E Almaguer-Mederos; Roberto Rodríguez-Labrada; Gilberto Sánchez-Cruz; Raúl Aguilera-Rodríguez; Tania Cruz-Mariño; Nalia Canales-Ochoa; Patrick MacLeod; Luis Velázquez-Pérez Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias Date: 2015-02-21