Heterozygosity for Tay-Sachs disease in non-Jewish Americans with ancestry from Ireland or Great Britain.
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Medical Genetics
- Vol. 33 (10) , 829-832
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.33.10.829
Abstract
We performed a genetic epidemiological analysis of American non-Jewish people with ancestry from Ireland or Great Britain with regard to heterozgosity for Tay-Sachs disease (TSD). This study was prompted by a recent report that the frequency of heterozygosity for TSD among Irish Americans was 1 in 8, a frequency much higher than that recognised for any other population group. We identified 19 of 576 (3.3%) people of Irish background as TSD heterozygotes by the standard thermolability assay for beta-hexosaminidase A (Hex A) activity. Three of 289 people of non-Irish British Isles background (1%) were also identified as heterozygotes by biochemical testing. Specimens from the biochemically identified Irish heterozygotes were analysed for seven different Hex A alpha subunit gene mutations; three (15.8%) had a lethal +1 IVS-9 G to A mutation, previously noted to be a common mutation among TSD heterozygotes of Irish ancestry. Eight of 19 (42.1%) had one of two benign or pseudodeficiency mutations, and no mutation was found in 42.1% of the heterozygotes analysed. These data indicate that non-Jewish Americans with Irish background have a significantly increased frequency of heterozygosity at the Hex A alpha subunit gene locus, but that approximately 42% of the biochemically ascertained heterozygotes have clinically benign mutations. A pseudodeficiency mutation was identified in one of the three TSD heterozygotes of non-Irish British Isles background; no mutations were found in the other two. The data allow for a frequency estimate of deleterious alleles for TSD among Irish Americans of 1 in 192 to 1 in 52. Non-Jewish Americans with ancestry from Great Britain have a minimal, if any, increase in rate of heterozygosity at the TSD gene locus relative to the general population.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Further investigation of the HEXA gene intron 9 donor splice site mutation frequently found in non-Jewish Tay-Sachs disease patients from the British Isles.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1993
- Beta-hexosaminidase splice site mutation has a high frequency among non-Jewish Tay-Sachs disease carriers from the British Isles.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1992
- A mutation common in non-jewish Tay-Sachs disease: Frequency and RNA studiesHuman Mutation, 1992
- Marked variation in blood beta-hexosaminidase in Gaucher diseaseClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1991
- Frequency of the Tay-Sachs disease splice and insertion mutations in the UK Ashkenazi Jewish population.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1991
- Tay-Sachs disease heterozygote detection: use of a centrifugal analyser for automation of hexosaminidase assays with two different artificial substrates.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1991
- The Mutations in Ashkenazi Jews with Adult G M2 Gangliosidosis, the Adult Form of Tay-Sachs DiseaseScience, 1989
- Identification of an altered splice site in Ashkenazi Tay-Sachs diseaseNature, 1988
- A splicing defect due to an exon-intron junctional mutation results in abnormal β-hexosaminidase α chain mRNAs in Ashkenazi Jewish patients with Tay-Sachs diseaseBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1988
- Different Mutations in Ashkenazi Jewish and Non-Jewish French Canadians with Tay-Sachs DiseaseScience, 1986