Huntington Disease
From Iusmgenetics
(Difference between revisions)
(Created page with '==Huntington Disease== ===General background information=== ===Mode of inheritance=== *'''Autosomal dominant''' *97% of cases are inherited *Because of anticipation, there are …') |
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===General background information=== | ===General background information=== | ||
+ | *Ethical issues in genetic counseling include whether or not presymptomatic testing is apparopriate for those with the potential of inheriting Huntington disease. | ||
+ | **Do / should people want to know their fate? | ||
+ | **If it doesn't change treatment, why find out? | ||
+ | **Is the burden of knowing right? | ||
===Mode of inheritance=== | ===Mode of inheritance=== | ||
*'''Autosomal dominant''' | *'''Autosomal dominant''' | ||
*97% of cases are inherited | *97% of cases are inherited | ||
+ | *3% of cases are de novo mutations | ||
+ | **New mutations are generally paternally derived | ||
*Because of anticipation, there are many ethical issues around presymptomatic testing. | *Because of anticipation, there are many ethical issues around presymptomatic testing. | ||
*Genetic counseling is important in Huntington disease. | *Genetic counseling is important in Huntington disease. | ||
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**Reduced penetrance: 36-41 repeats | **Reduced penetrance: 36-41 repeats | ||
**Increasing penetrance: 42+ repeats | **Increasing penetrance: 42+ repeats | ||
+ | **Adult onset: 40-55 repeats | ||
+ | **Juvenile onset: >60 repeats | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
*The glutamine tract causes the protein to '''accumulate in the nucleus and cytoplasm'''. | *The glutamine tract causes the protein to '''accumulate in the nucleus and cytoplasm'''. | ||
*'''We call this a gain of negative function''' at the protein level. | *'''We call this a gain of negative function''' at the protein level. | ||
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**40-55 repeats manifest adult onset | **40-55 repeats manifest adult onset | ||
**> 60 repeats manifest juvenile onset | **> 60 repeats manifest juvenile onset | ||
+ | **Penetrance is high with larger mutant alleles (e.g., >40 repeats) | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | *Huntington disease demonstrates gender-specific anticipation: | ||
+ | **Note that this gender-specific anticipation refers to the gender of the parent. | ||
+ | **80% of juvenile cases are paternally derived. | ||
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**90% of pts | **90% of pts | ||
**Converts to rigidity later in disease | **Converts to rigidity later in disease | ||
- | *All aspects of cognition are affected | + | *All aspects of cognition are affected |
- | *Behavioral | + | **Language is affected later in disease. |
+ | *Behavioral disturbances develop later in the course of the disease | ||
**Aggression, apathy, sexual deviation | **Aggression, apathy, sexual deviation | ||
*Psychiatric: personality changes, affective psychosis, schizophrenia | *Psychiatric: personality changes, affective psychosis, schizophrenia |
Current revision as of 13:10, 28 November 2011
Contents |
[edit] Huntington Disease
[edit] General background information
- Ethical issues in genetic counseling include whether or not presymptomatic testing is apparopriate for those with the potential of inheriting Huntington disease.
- Do / should people want to know their fate?
- If it doesn't change treatment, why find out?
- Is the burden of knowing right?
[edit] Mode of inheritance
- Autosomal dominant
- 97% of cases are inherited
- 3% of cases are de novo mutations
- New mutations are generally paternally derived
- Because of anticipation, there are many ethical issues around presymptomatic testing.
- Genetic counseling is important in Huntington disease.
[edit] Single important gene
- The Huntingtin protein has an unknown function but is known to be the site of repeat expansion that causes Huntington Disease
[edit] Etiology
- Repeat of CAG occurs in the coding region of exon 1, generating a polyglutamine tract.
- Normal: 10-26 CAG repeats
- Premutation: 27-35 CAG repeats
- Reduced penetrance: 36-41 repeats
- Increasing penetrance: 42+ repeats
- Adult onset: 40-55 repeats
- Juvenile onset: >60 repeats
- The glutamine tract causes the protein to accumulate in the nucleus and cytoplasm.
- We call this a gain of negative function at the protein level.
- Recall that myotonic dystrophy was a gain of negative function at the mRNA level.
[edit] Pathogenesis
- The number of repeats correlates with onset: more repeats -> earlier onset.
- 40-55 repeats manifest adult onset
- > 60 repeats manifest juvenile onset
- Penetrance is high with larger mutant alleles (e.g., >40 repeats)
- Huntington disease demonstrates gender-specific anticipation:
- Note that this gender-specific anticipation refers to the gender of the parent.
- 80% of juvenile cases are paternally derived.
- Opposite to myotonic dystrophy and Fragile X sydnrome, Huntington disease demonstrates paternally derived mutations bias.
- 80% of juvenile cases (repeats > 60) come from the father.
- This causes a gender-specific anticipation because when the father has HD, anticipation will be accelerated when compared to a similar case in which the mother has the mutant allele.
[edit] Phenotypic information
- Pts survive for 15-18 years after diagnosis
- Huntington disease affects motor, cognitive, behavioral, and psychiatric function.
- Behavior and psychiatric deterioration occur later in the disease course.
- Motor: involuntary movements (called chorea) that cannot be suppressed voluntarily.
- 90% of pts
- Converts to rigidity later in disease
- All aspects of cognition are affected
- Language is affected later in disease.
- Behavioral disturbances develop later in the course of the disease
- Aggression, apathy, sexual deviation
- Psychiatric: personality changes, affective psychosis, schizophrenia