Essential tremor (ET) is the most common but a complex neurological movement disorder. ET usually affects hands, but it may also affect head, neck, face, jaw, tongue, voice, trunk and, rarely, legs and feet. Although two susceptibility loci were identified on chromosome 2p24 (ETM2) and 3q13 (ETM1 or FET1), the exact transcript(s) has not been cloned. We analyzed unrelated Korean individuals with ET for a genetic association with three reported polymorphic loci (STS-etm1240, STS-etm1231, and STS-etm1234) in a candidate region on chromosome 2p24.1. We investigated sequence polymorphisms at these three loci in 30 ET patients and 30 controls using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification followed by sequence analysis. Eight different sequence variants (5 at etm1234, 2 at etm1240, and 1 at etm1231) were detected from 7 patients. Of interest, sequence variants were found only in classic ET patients but not in nonclassic ET patients and healthy individuals. Additionally, we also observed that a decrease in the number of short tandem repeats within etm1234 locus is more frequent in ET patients compared to controls. Our data thus support that ET development would be linked with the ETM2 locus and will facilitate the search for the ETM2 gene transcript.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mds.20646 | DOI Listing |
Neurology
March 2014
From the Institute of Experimental Medicine (G.K., F.H.), Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel; and the Department of Neurology (F.H., G.D.), University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Germany. G.K. is currently with the Department of Neurology, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein.
Objective: To provide a comprehensive meta-analysis and review of the clinical and molecular genetics of essential tremor (ET).
Methods: Studies were reviewed from the literature. Linkage studies were analyzed applying criteria used for monogenic disorders.
Neuro Endocrinol Lett
December 2010
Department of Pediatrics, Charles University in Prague, 1st Faculty of Medicine and General Teaching Hospital, Czech Republic.
Objectives: Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common neurological movement disorders. In more than half of the cases, ET is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, but no causative ET gene has been identified. However, several candidate loci have been reported, including the ETM2 locus that was originally found in a large American family of Czech descent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParkinsonism Relat Disord
April 2008
Dipartimento Universitario di Neuroscienze Cliniche, University of Palermo, Italy.
Familial essential tremor (FET) is a common hereditary movement disorder with phenotypic variability and genetic heterogeneity. To date, linkage analyses revealed three loci associated to essential tremor (ET) (ETM1 on 3q13, ETM2 on 2p22-25, and a locus on 6p23). We performed a genetic analysis of these candidate chromosomal regions in a fifth-generation Italian kindred with autosomal-dominant ET.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain
June 2007
Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Essential tremor (ET), the cause of which remains poorly understood, is one of the most common neurological disorders. While environmental agents have been proposed to play a role, genetic factors are believed to contribute to its onset. Thus far, three gene loci (ETM1 on 3q13, ETM2 on 2p24.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMov Disord
December 2005
School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Seoul, Korea.
Essential tremor (ET) is the most common but a complex neurological movement disorder. ET usually affects hands, but it may also affect head, neck, face, jaw, tongue, voice, trunk and, rarely, legs and feet. Although two susceptibility loci were identified on chromosome 2p24 (ETM2) and 3q13 (ETM1 or FET1), the exact transcript(s) has not been cloned.
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