Localization of the gene for a novel autosomal recessive neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder to 4p15.3
Author: Kambouris M, Bohlega S, Al Tahan A, Meyer BF.
Source:
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 66(2), 445-452.
A consanguineous family affected by an autosomal recessive, progressive
neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder, was tested to rule out juvenile-onset
Huntington disease (JHD). The disease manifests at approximately 3-4 years and is
characterized by both pyramidal and extrapyramidal abnormalities, including
chorea, dystonia, ataxia, gait instability, spasticity, seizures, mutism, and
intellectual impairment. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings include
progressive frontal cortical atrophy and bilateral caudate atrophy. Huntington
CAG trinucleotide-repeat analyses ruled out JHD, since all affected individuals
had repeat numbers within the normal range. The presence of only four recombinant
events (straight theta=.2) between the disease and the Huntington locus in 20
informative meioses suggested that the disease localized to chromosome 4. Linkage
was initially achieved with marker D4S2366 at 4p15.3 (LOD 3.03). High-density
mapping at the linked locus resulted in homozygosity for markers D4S431 and
D4S394, which span a 3-cM region. A maximum LOD score of 4.71 in the homozygous
interval was obtained. Heterozygosity at the distal D4S2366 and proximal D4S2983
markers defines the maximum localization interval (7 cM). Multiple brain-related
expressed sequence tags (ESTs) with no known disease association exist in the
linkage interval. Among the three known genes residing in the linked interval
(ACOX3, DRD5, QDPR), the most likely candidate, DRD5, encoding the dopamine
receptor D5, was excluded, since all five affected family members were
heterozygous for an intragenic dinucleotide repeat. The inheritance pattern and
unique localization to 4p15.3 are consistent with the identification of a novel,
autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder.