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Frataxin point mutations in two patients with Friedreich's ataxia and unusual clinical features
  1. Melissa L McCormacka,
  2. Rodney P Guttmanna,
  3. Matthew Schumanna,
  4. Jennifer M Farmerb,
  5. Catherine A Stollec,
  6. Victoria Campuzanod,
  7. Michel Koenigd,
  8. David R Lyncha
  1. aDepartments of Neurology, Pediatrics, and Pharmacology, Division of Neuroscience Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , USA, bDivision of Medical Genetics, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA, cDepartment of Genetics, dInstitut de Genetique et de Biologie Moleculaire et Cellulaire (IGBMC), CNRS, INSERM, Universite Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France
  1. Dr David R Lynch, Division of Neuroscience Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 502 Abramson Building, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104–4318, USAlynch{at}pharm.med.upenn.edu

Abstract

Two patients with a progressive ataxia are presented with clinical features consistent with classic Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA), but also with features unusual for FRDA. Analysis of DNA showed that each patient is heterozygous for the expanded GAA repeat of FRDA, but carries a base change on his other frataxin allele. For one patient a non-conservative arginine to cysteine amino acid change is predicted at amino acid 165 whereas the other mutation is found at the junction of exon one and intron one. Muscle biopsy showed an absence of frataxin immunoreactivity in the patient harbouring the intronic mutation, confirming the pathological nature of the base change. These mutations extend the range of point mutations seen in FRDA, and agree with recent reports suggesting phenotypic variation in patients with FRDA harbouring point mutations in conjunction with an expanded GAA repeat.

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