Frequency and distribution of polyQ disease intermediate-length repeat alleles in healthy Italian population:
Abstract
Background
Huntington disease (HD) and spinocerebellar ataxia type 1-2-17 (SCA1-2-17) are adult-onset autosomal dominant diseases, caused by triplet repeat expansions in the
HTT, ATXN1, ATXN2, and
TBP genes. Alleles with a repeat number just below the pathological threshold are associated with reduced penetrance and meiotic instability and are defined as intermediate alleles (IAs).
Objectives
We aimed to determine the frequencies of IAs in healthy Italian subjects and to compare the proportion of the IAs with the prevalence of the respective diseases.
Methods
We analyzed the triplet repeat size in
HTT, ATXN1, ATXN2, and
TBP genes in the DNA samples from 729 consecutive adult healthy Italian subjects.
Results
IAs associated with reduced penetrance were found in
ATXN2 gene (1 subject, 0.1%) and
TBP gene (0.82%). IAs at risk for meiotic instability were found in
HTT (5.3%) and
ATXN2 genes (2.7%). In
ATXN1, we found a low percentage of IAs (0.4%). Alleles lacking the common CAT interruption within the CAG sequence were also rare (0.3%).
Conclusions
The high frequencies of IAs in
HTT and
ATXN2 genes suggest a correlation with the prevalence of the diseases in our population and support the hypothesis that IAs could represent a reservoir of new pathological expansions. On the opposite,
ATXN1-IA were very rare in respect to the prevalence of SCA1 in our country, and
TBP- IA were more frequent than expected, suggesting that other mechanisms could influence the occurrence of novel pathological expansions.
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