Literature DB >> 7825566

Somatic heterogeneity of the CTG repeat in myotonic dystrophy is age and size dependent.

L J Wong1, T Ashizawa, D G Monckton, C T Caskey, C S Richards.   

Abstract

The most common form of adult muscular dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy (DM), is caused by the abnormal expansion of the CTG repeat, located in the 3' UTR of the DM gene. The expanded-CTG allele often presents as a diffused band on Southern blot analysis, suggesting somatic mosaicism. In order to study the somatic instability of the CTG repeat, we have investigated the dynamics of the size heterogeneity of the CTG expansion. Size heterogeneity is shown as a smear on Southern blot and is measured by the midpeak-width ratio of the expanded allele to the normal sized allele. The ratio is also corrected for compression in the higher-molecular-weight region. It is found that the size heterogeneity of the expanded-CTG repeats, of 173 DM patients, correlates well with the age of the patient (r = .81, P << .001). The older patients show larger size variation. This correlation is independent of the sex of either the patient or the transmitting parent. The size heterogeneity of the expansion, based on age groups, is also dependent on the size of the expanded trinucleotide repeat. However, obvious size heterogeneity is not observed in congenital cases, regardless of the size of expansion. Comparison of individual patient samples collected at two different times has confirmed that the degree of size heterogeneity increases with age and has revealed a subtle but definite upward shift in the size of the expanded-CTG allele. The progression of the CTG repeat toward larger expansion with age is further confirmed by small-pool PCR assay that resolved the heterogeneous fragments into discrete bands.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7825566      PMCID: PMC1801291     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  32 in total

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3.  Methylation and mutation patterns in the fragile X syndrome.

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4.  Myotonic dystrophy mutation: an unstable CTG repeat in the 3' untranslated region of the gene.

Authors:  M Mahadevan; C Tsilfidis; L Sabourin; G Shutler; C Amemiya; G Jansen; C Neville; M Narang; J Barceló; K O'Hoy
Journal:  Science       Date:  1992-03-06       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  An unstable triplet repeat in a gene related to myotonic muscular dystrophy.

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6.  Phenotypic expression of the myotonic dystrophy gene in monozygotic twins.

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7.  Expansion of an unstable DNA region and phenotypic variation in myotonic dystrophy.

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8.  Detection of an unstable fragment of DNA specific to individuals with myotonic dystrophy.

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9.  Cloning of the essential myotonic dystrophy region and mapping of the putative defect.

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10.  Molecular basis of myotonic dystrophy: expansion of a trinucleotide (CTG) repeat at the 3' end of a transcript encoding a protein kinase family member.

Authors:  J D Brook; M E McCurrach; H G Harley; A J Buckler; D Church; H Aburatani; K Hunter; V P Stanton; J P Thirion; T Hudson
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  68 in total

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2.  Bidirectional transcription stimulates expansion and contraction of expanded (CTG)*(CAG) repeats.

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4.  Association between repeat sizes and clinical and pathological characteristics in carriers of C9ORF72 repeat expansions (Xpansize-72): a cross-sectional cohort study.

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5.  Expanded CTG repeat demarcates a boundary for abnormal CpG methylation in myotonic dystrophy patient tissues.

Authors:  Arturo López Castel; Masayuki Nakamori; Stephanie Tomé; David Chitayat; Geneviève Gourdon; Charles A Thornton; Christopher E Pearson
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6.  The DMPK gene of severely affected myotonic dystrophy patients is hypermethylated proximal to the largely expanded CTG repeat.

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Review 8.  How do C9ORF72 repeat expansions cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia: can we learn from other noncoding repeat expansion disorders?

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9.  Chemotherapeutic deletion of CTG repeats in lymphoblast cells from DM1 patients.

Authors:  Vera I Hashem; Malgorzata J Pytlos; Elzbieta A Klysik; Kuniko Tsuji; Mehrdad Khajavi; Merhdad Khajav; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Richard R Sinden
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10.  Modelling and inference reveal nonlinear length-dependent suppression of somatic instability for small disease associated alleles in myotonic dystrophy type 1 and Huntington disease.

Authors:  Catherine F Higham; Darren G Monckton
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2013-09-18       Impact factor: 4.118

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