Gerstmann‐Sträussler‐Scheinker Disease and the Indiana Kindred
- 28 January 1995
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Brain Pathology
- Vol. 5 (1) , 61-75
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-3639.1995.tb00578.x
Abstract
Gerstmann‐Sträussler‐Scheinker disease is an autosomal dominant disorder with a wide spectrum of clinical presentations including ataxia, spastic paraparesis, extrapyramidal signs, and dementia. The patients present with symptoms in the third to sixth decade of life and the mean duration of illness is five years. Mutations at codons 102, 105, 117, 145, 198 and 217 of the open reading frame of the prion protein gene have been associated with GSS disease. As a result of the mutations, a substitution at the corresponding residues of the prion protein occurs, or as in the case of the STOP mutation at codon 145, a truncated protein is produced. Neuropathologically, the common denominator is a cerebral prion protein amyloidosis; however, there is significant variability in the pattern of amyloid deposition in regions of the central nervous system among reported families. Amyloidosis coexists with severe spongiform degeneration in patients with the mutation at codon 102, and with neurofibrillary degeneration in the patients with mutation at codons 145, 198 and 217. The development of a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy in animals inoculated with brain tissue from affected subjects with mutation at codon 102 suggests that in some formsofgenetically‐determined Gerstmann‐Sträussler‐Scheinker disease, and particularly those characterized by severe spongiosis, amyloidogenesis and production of an infectious “agent” occur concomitantly via mechanisms that are only partially understood.Keywords
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