Machado-Joseph disease in pedigrees of Azorean descent is linked to chromosome 14.

Peter St George‐Hyslop(University of Toronto), E. Rogaeva(Institute of Medical Sciences), J. Huterer(University of Toronto), T. Tsuda(Institute of Medical Sciences), Javier Santos(Harvard University Press), Jonathan Haines(Genopole (France)), Karen S. Schlumpf(Genopole (France)), Е. И. Рогаев(Institute of Medical Sciences), Yuh‐Jin Liang(Institute of Medical Sciences), D. R. Crapper McLachlan
PubMed
July 1, 1994
Cited by 29Open Access
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Abstract

A locus for Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) has recently been mapped to a 30-cM region of chromosome 14q in five pedigrees of Japanese descent. MJD is a clinically pleomorphic neurodegenerative disease that was originally described in subjects of Azorean descent. In light of the nonallelic heterogeneity in other inherited spinocerebellar ataxias, we were interested to determine if the MJD phenotype in Japanese and Azorean pedigrees arose from mutations at the same locus. We provide evidence that MJD in five pedigrees of Azorean descent is also linked to chromosome 14q in an 18-cM region between the markers D14S67 and AACT (multipoint lod score +7.00 near D14S81). We also report molecular evidence for homozygosity at the MJD locus in an MJD-affected subject with severe, early-onset symptoms. These observations confirm the initial report of linkage of MJD to chromosome 14; suggest that MJD in Japanese and Azorean subjects may represent allelic or identical mutations at the same locus; and provide one possible explanation (MJD gene dosage) for the observed phenotypic heterogeneity in this disease.


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