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

HG Harley, JD Brook, SA Rundle, S Crow, W Reardon… - Nature, 1992 - nature.com
HG Harley, JD Brook, SA Rundle, S Crow, W Reardon, AJ Buckler, PS Harper, DE Housman…
Nature, 1992nature.com
Abstract MYOTONIC Received 2 December 1991; accepted 7 January 1992. dystrophy is
the commonest adult form of muscular dystrophy, with an estimated incidence of 1 per 7,500,
although this is likely to be an underestimate because of the difficulty of detecting minimally
affected individuals. It is a multisystem autosomal dominant disorder of unknown
biochemical basis1. No case of new mutation has been proven. We have isolated a human
genomic clone that detects novel restriction fragments specific to individuals with myotonic …
Abstract
MYOTONIC Received 2 December 1991; accepted 7 January 1992. dystrophy is the commonest adult form of muscular dystrophy, with an estimated incidence of 1 per 7,500, although this is likely to be an underestimate because of the difficulty of detecting minimally affected individuals. It is a multisystem autosomal dominant disorder of unknown biochemical basis1. No case of new mutation has been proven. We have isolated a human genomic clone that detects novel restriction fragments specific to individuals with myotonic dystrophy. A two-allele EcoRl polymorphism is seen in normal individuals, but in most affected individuals one of the normal alleles is replaced by a larger fragment, which varies in length both between unrelated affected individuals and within families. The unstable nature of this region may explain the characteristic variation in severity and age at onset of the disease. A second polymorphism at this locus is in almost complete linkage disequilibrium with myotonic dystrophy, strongly supporting our earlier results which indicated that most cases are descended from one original mutation2.
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