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. 2001 Dec;69(6):1385-8.
doi: 10.1086/324414. Epub 2001 Oct 9.

Huntington disease phenocopy is a familial prion disease

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Huntington disease phenocopy is a familial prion disease

R C Moore et al. Am J Hum Genet. 2001 Dec.

Abstract

Huntington disease (HD) is a common autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease with early adult-onset motor abnormalities and dementia. Many studies of HD show that huntingtin (CAG)n repeat-expansion length is a sensitive and specific marker for HD. However, there are a significant number of examples of HD in the absence of a huntingtin (CAG)n expansion, suggesting that mutations in other genes can provoke HD-like disorders. The identification of genes responsible for these "phenocopies" may greatly improve the reliability of genetic screens for HD and may provide further insight into neurodegenerative disease. We have examined an HD phenocopy pedigree with linkage to chromosome 20p12 for mutations in the prion protein (PrP) gene (PRNP). This reveals that affected individuals are heterozygous for a 192-nucleotide (nt) insertion within the PrP coding region, which encodes an expanded PrP with eight extra octapeptide repeats. This reveals that this HD phenocopy is, in fact, a familial prion disease and that PrP repeat-expansion mutations can provoke an HD "genocopy." PrP repeat expansions are well characterized and provoke early-onset, slowly progressive atypical prion diseases with an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance and a remarkable range of clinical features, many of which overlap with those of HD. This observation raises the possibility that an unknown number of HD phenocopies are, in fact, familial prion diseases and argues that clinicians should consider screening for PrP mutations in individuals with HD-like diseases in which the characteristic HD (CAG)n repeat expansions are absent.

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Figures

Figure  1
Figure 1
Alignment of the wild-type and mutant PrP peptide sequences from a single individual from the HD phenocopy pedigree showing the eight-repeat expansion. The expanded repeats are shown below the wild-type sequence and are numbered according to silent substitutions in the DNA sequences. Wild-type human PrP contains one PQGGGGWGQ nonapeptide (encoded by R1) and four PHGGGWGQ octapeptides (encoded by R2-R4), such that the normal sequence is R1-R2-R2-R3-R4. The mutant allele has eight extra PHGGGWGQ repeats: R1-R2-R2-R3g-R2-R2-R2-R3g-R3g-R2-R2-R3-R4. Both alleles encode methionine at codon 129.

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References

Electronic-Database Information

    1. GenBank, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Genbank/ (for human prion protein [BAA00011], doppel [NP_036541], and huntingtin [AAB38240])
    1. Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM), http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Omim/ (for HD [MIM 143100], HD phenocopy/Huntington-like neurodegenerative disorder 1 [HLN1; MIM 603218], PRNP [MIM 176640], and PRND [MIM 604263])

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