Background: Spinocerebellar ataxia 17 (SCA17) is one of the most heterogeneous forms of autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias with a large clinical spectrum which can mimic other movement disorders such as Huntington disease (HD), dystonia and parkinsonism. SCA17 is caused by an expansion of CAG/CAA repeat in the Tata binding protein () gene. Normal alleles contain 25 to 40 CAG/CAA repeats, alleles with 50 or greater CAG/CAA repeats are pathological with full penetrance. Alleles with 43 to 49 CAG/CAA repeats were also reported and their penetrance is estimated between 50 and 80%. Recently few symptomatic individuals having 41 and 42 repeats were reported but it is still unclear whether CAG/CAA repeats of 41 or 42 are low penetrance disease-causing alleles. Thus, phenotypic variability like the disease course in subject with SCA17 locus restricted expansions remains to be fully understood.
Case Presentation: The patients was a 63-year-old woman who, at 54 years, showed personality changes and increased frequency of falls. At 55 years of age neuropsychological tests showed executive attention and visuospatial deficit. At the age of 59 the patient developed dysarthria and a progressive cognitive deficit. The neurological examination showed moderate gait ataxia, dysdiadochokinesia and dysmetria, dysphagia, dysarthria and abnormal saccadic pursuit, severe axial asynergy during postural changes, choreiform dyskinesias. Molecular analysis of the gene demonstrated an allele with 41 repeat suggesting that 41 CAG/CCG repeats could be an allele associated with the full clinical spectrum of SCA17.
Conclusions: The described case with the other similar cases described in the literature suggests that 41 CAG/CAA trinucleotides should be considered as critical threshold in SCA17. We suggest that SCA17 diagnosis should be suspected in patients presenting with movement disorders associated with other neurodegenerative signs and symptoms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40673-018-0086-x | DOI Listing |
Since 1991, several genetic disorders caused by unstable trinucleotide repeats (TNRs) have been identified, collectively referred to as triplet repeat diseases (TREDs). They share a common mutation mechanism: the expansion of repeats (dynamic mutations) due to the propensity of repeated sequences to form unusual DNA structures during replication. TREDs are characterized as neurodegenerative diseases or complex syndromes with significant neurological components.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMov Disord
September 2024
Department of Neurology, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behavior, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Background: Monoallelic, pathogenic STUB1 variants cause autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ATX-STUB1/SCA48). Recently, a genetic interaction between STUB1 variants and intermediate or high-normal CAG/CAA repeats in TBP was suggested, indicating digenic inheritance or a disease-modifying role for TBP expansions.
Objective: To determine the presence and impact of intermediate or high-normal TBP expansions in ataxic patients with heterozygous STUB1 variants.
Acta Neurol Belg
April 2024
Department of Neurology, The Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, 310009, Zhejiang, China.
G3 (Bethesda)
September 2023
Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Int J Mol Sci
February 2023
School of Horticulture, Anhui Agricultural University, Hefei 230036, China.
pv. () causes bacterial canker of kiwifruit with heavy economic losses. However, little is known about the pathogenic genes of .
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