Literature DB >> 7839819

On an autosomal dominant form of retinal-cerebellar degeneration: an autopsy study of five patients in one family.

J J Martin1, N Van Regemorter, L Krols, J M Brucher, T de Barsy, H Szliwowski, P Evrard, C Ceuterick, M J Tassignon, H Smet-Dieleman.   

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.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7839819     DOI: 10.1007/bf00310370

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Neuropathol        ISSN: 0001-6322            Impact factor:   17.088


  27 in total

1.  A 17th-century founder gives rise to a large north American pedigree of autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia not linked to the SCA1 locus on chromosome 6.

Authors:  A Lazzarini; T R Zimmerman; W G Johnson; R C Duvoisin
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  1992-11       Impact factor: 9.910

2.  Hereditary spastic ataxia with central retinal degeneration and vestibular impairment. A clinical report on a family.

Authors:  M BERGSTEDT; S JOHANSSON; R MULLER
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  1962-02       Impact factor: 9.910

3.  [Anatomy of the thalamus and its pathology in degenerative diseases designated as abiotrophic].

Authors:  J J Martin
Journal:  Acta Neurol Belg       Date:  1970 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.396

4.  Adult hereditary cerebelloretinal degeneration.

Authors:  J H Halsey; T R Scott; T W Farmer
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  1967-01       Impact factor: 9.910

5.  Assignment of autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA1) centromeric to the HLA region on the short arm of chromosome 6, using multilocus linkage analysis.

Authors:  H Y Zoghbi; L A Sandkuyl; J Ott; S P Daiger; M Pollack; W E O'Brien; A L Beaudet
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1989-02       Impact factor: 11.025

6.  Atrophic maculopathy associated with hereditary ataxia.

Authors:  K U Duinkerke-Eerola; J R Cruysberg; A F Deutman
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  1980-11       Impact factor: 5.258

7.  The gene for Machado-Joseph disease maps to human chromosome 14q.

Authors:  Y Takiyama; M Nishizawa; H Tanaka; S Kawashima; H Sakamoto; Y Karube; H Shimazaki; M Soutome; K Endo; S Ohta
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  1993-07       Impact factor: 38.330

8.  Hereditary multisystemic degeneration with unusual combination of cerebellipetal, dentato-rubral, and nigro-subthalamo-pallidal degenerations.

Authors:  T Mizutani; M Oda; H Abe; S Fukuda; H Oikawa; K Kosaka
Journal:  Clin Neuropathol       Date:  1983       Impact factor: 1.368

9.  Autosomal dominant ataxia: genetic evidence for locus heterogeneity from a Cuban founder-effect population.

Authors:  G Auburger; G O Diaz; R F Capote; S G Sanchez; M P Perez; M E del Cueto; M G Meneses; M Farrall; R Williamson; S Chamberlain
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1990-06       Impact factor: 11.025

10.  Machado-Joseph-Azorean disease. A ten-year study.

Authors:  H L Fowler
Journal:  Arch Neurol       Date:  1984-09
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  25 in total

1.  Gcn5 loss-of-function accelerates cerebellar and retinal degeneration in a SCA7 mouse model.

Authors:  Yi Chun Chen; Jennifer R Gatchel; Rebecca W Lewis; Chai-An Mao; Patrick A Grant; Huda Y Zoghbi; Sharon Y R Dent
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2011-10-14       Impact factor: 6.150

2.  Somatic instability of expanded CAG repeats of ATXN7 in Japanese patients with spinocerebellar ataxia type 7.

Authors:  Satoshi Katagiri; Takaaki Hayashi; Tomokazu Takeuchi; Hisashi Yamada; Tamaki Gekka; Kiyokazu Kawabe; Akira Kurita; Hiroshi Tsuneoka
Journal:  Doc Ophthalmol       Date:  2015-02-03       Impact factor: 2.379

3.  CTCF regulates ataxin-7 expression through promotion of a convergently transcribed, antisense noncoding RNA.

Authors:  Bryce L Sopher; Paula D Ladd; Victor V Pineda; Randell T Libby; Susan M Sunkin; James B Hurley; Cortlandt P Thienes; Terry Gaasterland; Galina N Filippova; Albert R La Spada
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2011-06-23       Impact factor: 17.173

4.  Nicotinamide Pathway-Dependent Sirt1 Activation Restores Calcium Homeostasis to Achieve Neuroprotection in Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 7.

Authors:  Colleen A Stoyas; David D Bushart; Pawel M Switonski; Jacqueline M Ward; Akshay Alaghatta; Mi-Bo Tang; Chenchen Niu; Mandheer Wadhwa; Haoran Huang; Alex Savchenko; Karim Gariani; Fang Xie; Joseph R Delaney; Terry Gaasterland; Johan Auwerx; Vikram G Shakkottai; Albert R La Spada
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2019-12-16       Impact factor: 17.173

Review 5.  The spinocerebellar ataxias: order emerges from chaos.

Authors:  Russell L Margolis
Journal:  Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 5.081

6.  Inhibition of autophagy via p53-mediated disruption of ULK1 in a SCA7 polyglutamine disease model.

Authors:  Xin Yu; Andrés Muñoz-Alarcón; Abiodun Ajayi; Kristin E Webling; Anne Steinhof; Ülo Langel; Anna-Lena Ström
Journal:  J Mol Neurosci       Date:  2013-04-18       Impact factor: 3.444

Review 7.  Regulatory mechanisms of long noncoding RNAs in vertebrate central nervous system development and function.

Authors:  J L Knauss; T Sun
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2013-01-18       Impact factor: 3.590

Review 8.  The ubiquitin-proteasome system in retinal health and disease.

Authors:  Laura Campello; Julián Esteve-Rudd; Nicolás Cuenca; José Martín-Nieto
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  2013-01-22       Impact factor: 5.590

9.  Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7: clinical course, phenotype-genotype correlations, and neuropathology.

Authors:  Laura C Horton; Matthew P Frosch; Mark G Vangel; Carol Weigel-DiFranco; Eliot L Berson; Jeremy D Schmahmann
Journal:  Cerebellum       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 3.847

10.  Design of RNAi hairpins for mutation-specific silencing of ataxin-7 and correction of a SCA7 phenotype.

Authors:  Janine Scholefield; L Jacquie Greenberg; Marc S Weinberg; Patrick B Arbuthnot; Amr Abdelgany; Matthew J A Wood
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-09-30       Impact factor: 3.240

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