Origin of a regressed myotonic dystrophy allele.
Open Access
- 1 February 1994
- journal article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Medical Genetics
- Vol. 31 (2) , 130-132
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.31.2.130
Abstract
A new case of regression of the CTG copy number in the myotonic dystrophy allele was observed in a 7 year old boy. His affected father had an expanded allele of about 100 repeats in his lymphocyte DNA while the child showed a 60 repeat allele, of the same size as the present in the grandfather. Analysis of the father's sperm DNA allowed us to detect an expanded fragment of approximately the same size (62 repeats) as that present in the child's and grandfather's lymphocytes. This fragment was not detectable in the father's lymphocytes. Thus the regression is constitutive in the child, being already present in his father's germline. It is therefore likely that the regressed allele is present in all the tissues of the child, allowing a favourable prognosis.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Intergenerational stability of the myotonic dystrophy protomutationHuman Molecular Genetics, 1993
- Reverse Mutation in Myotonic DystrophyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Direct Diagnosis of Myotonic Dystrophy with a Disease-Specific DNA MarkerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Reduction in Size of the Myotonic Dystrophy Trinucleotide Repeat Mutation During TransmissionScience, 1993
- Correlation between CTG trinucleotide repeat length and frequency of severe congenital myotonic dystrophyNature Genetics, 1992
- Myotonic Dystrophy Mutation: an Unstable CTG Repeat in the 3′ Untranslated region of the GeneScience, 1992
- MYOTONIC DYSTROPHYBrain, 1991
- Predictive diagnosis of myotonic dystrophy with flanking microsatellite markers.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1991
- Criteria for establishing the validity of genetic recombination in myotonic dystrophyNeurology, 1989
- Pre-symptomatic detection and genetic counselling in myotonic dystrophyClinical Genetics, 1973