Phenotypic characterization of individuals with 30–40 CAG repeats in the Huntington disease (HD) gene reveals HD cases with 36 repeats and apparently normal …

DC Rubinsztein, J Leggo, R Coles… - American journal of …, 1996 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
DC Rubinsztein, J Leggo, R Coles, E Almqvist, V Biancalana, JJ Cassiman, K Chotai…
American journal of human genetics, 1996ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Abnormal CAG expansions in the IT-15 gene are associated with Huntington disease (HD).
In the diagnostic setting it is necessary to define the limits of the CAG size ranges on normal
and HD-associated chromosomes. Most large analyses that defined the limits of the normal
and pathological size ranges employed PCR assays, which included the CAG repeats and a
CCG repeat tract that was thought to be invariant. Many of these experiments found an
overlap between the normal and disease size ranges. Subsequent findings that the CCG …
Abstract
Abnormal CAG expansions in the IT-15 gene are associated with Huntington disease (HD). In the diagnostic setting it is necessary to define the limits of the CAG size ranges on normal and HD-associated chromosomes. Most large analyses that defined the limits of the normal and pathological size ranges employed PCR assays, which included the CAG repeats and a CCG repeat tract that was thought to be invariant. Many of these experiments found an overlap between the normal and disease size ranges. Subsequent findings that the CCG repeats vary by 8 trinucleotide lengths suggested that the limits of the normal and disease size ranges should be reevaluated with assays that exclude the CCG polymorphism. Since patients with between 30 and 40 repeats are rare, a consortium was assembled to collect such individuals.
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