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J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2000;68:672-675 doi:10.1136/jnnp.68.5.672
  • Short report

Absence of unidentified CAG repeat expansion in patients with Huntington's disease-like phenotype

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expanded (CAG)n repeat on the huntingtin gene. It is characterised by motor, psychiatric and cognitive disturbances. Diagnosis can be confirmed by direct genetic testing, which is highly sensitive and specific and is now considered definitive. This study focused on 21 patients presenting with a clinical phenotype showing strong similarity to HD, but who do not have an expanded CAG in the huntingtin gene. However, other possible diagnoses could be evoked for most of them. Seven patients (3.5% of our cohort) could be considered as phenocopies of HD with no alternative diagnosis. Samples were screened for other triplet repeat diseases with similar presentation (DRPLA, SCA-1, SCA-2, SCA-3, SCA-6, and SCA-7) and were all negative. The repeat expansion detection technique (RED) was used to detect uncloned CAG repeat expansions and samples were also analysed by polymerase chain reaction for expansions of the polymorphic CAG-ERDA-1 and CTG18.1 trinucleotide repeats. RED expansion (>40 repeats) was detected in only one patient. The results suggest that unstable CAG/CTG repeat expansions corresponding to known or unknown sequences are not involved in the aetiology of HD-like disorders. It is hypothesised that some of these phenocopies could correspond to mutations in other unidentified genes with other unstable repeats (different from CAG) or in unknown genes with other mutations.

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