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Trinucleotide Repeat Expansion in Neurological Disease
Ann Neurol 36:814-822, LaSpada,A.R.,et al, 1994
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Expansion of trinucleotide repeats is now recognized as a major cause of neurologic disease.At least seven disorders result from trinucleotide repeat expansion:X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy(SBMA),two fragile X syndromes of mental retardation(FRAXA and FRAXE),myotonic dystrophy,Huntington's disease,spinocerebellar ataxis type 1(SCA1),and dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy(DRPLA).The expanded trinucleotide repeats are unstable and the phenomenon of anticipation,i.e.,worsening of disease phenotype over successive generations,correlates with increasing expansion size.In this review,we compare the clinical and molecular features of the trinucleotide repeat diseases,which may be classified into two types.Fragile X and myotonic dystrophy are multisystem disorders usually associated with large expansions of untranslated repeats,while the four neurodegenerative disorders,SBMA,Huntington's disease,SCA1 and DRPLA, are caused by smaller expansions of CAG repeats within the protein coding portion of the gene.CAG repeats encode polyglutamine tracts,Polyglutamine tract expansion thus appears to be a common mechanism of inherited neurodegenerative disease.Although polyglutamine tract lengthening presumably has a toxic gain of function effect in the CAG trinucleotide repeat disorders,the basis of this neuronal toxicity remains unknown.
 
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advances in neurology
CAG repeats
degenerative diseases of CNS
dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy
fragile-X syndrome
genetic neurologic disorders
genetic testing
huntingtin
Huntington's chorea
molecular genetics
myotonia dystrophica
neurologic disease
neurologic disease,diagnoses of
review article
spinocerebellar ataxia type 1
spinocerebellar degeneration
trinucleotide repeats
X-linked bulbospinal neuronopathy

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