The gene causing Huntington's disease, an autosomal dominantly inherited, neurodegenerative disorder, has been identified recently. The corresponding mutation is involving an expansion in the number of (CAG)n repeats in the coding region of the Huntington's disease gene on chromosome 4. In this report, we demonstrate the length variation of the repeat in 513 non-HD chromosomes from normal individuals and HD patients showing 23 alleles with 11 to 33 repeats. Analyzing the inheritance of the (CAG)n stretch we found meiotic instability for HD alleles ([CAG]40 to [CAG]75) with a mutation frequency of approximately 0.7, while in 431 meioses of normal alleles only two expansions were identified. The risk of expansion during spermatogenesis is enhanced compared to oogenesis explaining juvenile onset by transmission from affected fathers. Further, the number of (CAG)n copies in an affected individual in relation to the sex of the transmitting parent was evaluated and no significant differences were found. No mosaicism or differences in the repeat lengths were observed in the DNA from different tissues including brain and lymphocytes of two HD patients indicating mitotic stability of the mutation. Therefore, the determination of the repeat number in the DNA of blood lymphocytes is probably representative of all tissues in a patient.
Down syndrome, the most common birth defect causing mental retardation, is characterized by a specific phenotype including subfertility or sterility and hypogonadism in males. In contrast, several females with Down syndrome have borne offspring. Here, a male with trisomy 21 fathering an infant is described. This observation is verified by serological markers, DNA fingerprinting using different DNA micro‐or minisatellites and andrological investigations.
Two unrelated, apparently balanced, reciprocal translocations involving chromosomes 3 and 17, and 10 and 15 were found in cultured amniotic fluid cells from a 41-year-old 10-gravida. Chromosome analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes of both parents revealed normal karyotypes. Post-partum examination of lymphocyte cultures from the proband confirmed the chromosome rearrangements. The child showed normal development during follow-up examinations up to the age of 4 years.
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