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An elusive expansion at the FRDA locus

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An elusive expansion at the FRDA locus Claire Healey, Andrew Purvis, Mohammed Kiron Kibria, Kara Gaffing, Fiona Coyne & Roger Mountford Cheshire and Merseyside ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: An elusive expansion at the FRDA locus


1
An elusive expansion at the FRDA locus
Claire Healey, Andrew Purvis, Mohammed Kiron
Kibria, Kara Gaffing, Fiona Coyne Roger
Mountford Cheshire and Merseyside Regional
Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Liverpool Womens
Hospital
2
Presentation Overview
  • Introduction
  • Friedreich ataxia
  • Clinical symptoms
  • Molecular pathology
  • Case 1
  • Diagnostic referral
  • CAG repeat expansion testing
  • Unusual TP-PCR result
  • Case 2
  • Diagnostic referral
  • Premutation plus GAA repeat expansion within the
    disease-causing size range
  • Case 3
  • Carrier testing

3
Friedreich Ataxia (FRDA)
  • Autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder
  • Affects the spinal column and cerebellum
  • Slowly progressive ataxia of the gait limbs
  • Onset 10 15 years of age
  • Associated with
  • Muscle weakness
  • Spasticity in the lower limbs
  • Absent lower limb reflexes
  • Dysarthria
  • Scoliosis
  • Pes cavus
  • Bladder dysfunction
  • Loss of position and vibration sense

4
FRDA
  • Additional clinical symptoms
  • 30
  • Hypertrophic non-obstructive
  • cardiomyopathy
  • 10-25
  • Optic atrophy
  • Deafness
  • Glucose intolerance
  • or
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • 25
  • Atypical presentation
  • Later age of onset
  • Retained tendon reflexes
  • or

5
Genetics of FRDA
  • Incidence of 2-4 per 100,000 Europe, N.
    Africa, Middle East S. Asia
  • Carrier frequency of 1100
  • FRDA gene (Frataxin or X25) indentified in 1996
  • Expansion of GAA triplet repeat within intron 1
    98 mutations

?
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaagaagaagaagaagaagaagaaaataaaga
  • Normal alleles 5-33 GAA repeats
  • Alleles gt 27 repeats rare
  • Premutation alleles 34-65 GAA repeats
  • Expanded alleles gt 66 GAA repeats
  • Some alleles have interrupted sequences
  • GAAGGA or GAGGAA

6
Genetics of FRDA
  • Incidence of 2-4 per 100,000 Europe, N.
    Africa, Middle East S. Asia
  • Carrier frequency of 1100
  • FRDA gene (Frataxin or X25) indentified in 1996
  • 98 mutations expansion of GAA triplet repeat
    within intron 1

5a
1
4
2
3
? 106
? 165
? 182
? 1
  • 1-2 FRDA patients GAA expansion plus
    inactivating mutation,
  • (nonsense, splicing, frameshift or
    missense)
  • Homozygous expansion compound heterozygous
    patients
  • clinically indistinguishable
  • Patients with missense mutations near the
    carboxy-terminus have atypically
  • mild FRDA
  • No patients have been described with two
    identified
  • point mutations

7
Molecular Genetic Testing
  • Detection of GAA repeats
  • Current testing strategy
  • F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
    primers

8
Molecular Genetic Testing
  • Detection of GAA repeats
  • Current testing strategy
  • F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
    primers

n/n (8/29 repeats)
n/?
9
Molecular Genetic Testing
  • Detection of GAA repeats
  • Current testing strategy
  • F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
    primers
  • Triplet-prime PCR

n
E
10
Case 1
  • Diagnostic referral
  • Expansion point mutation analysis requested
  • Institute of Neurology
  • GAA repeat flanking PCR
  • TP-PCR
  • Clinical details
  • 52 year old female
  • No further details avaliable

11
Case 1
  • F-PCR

8 repeats
Patient 1.
31 rpt control 2.
Expansion control 3.
Hom Het normal controls 4. 5.
12
Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
gaagaagaagaagaagaagaa
cttcttcttcttcttcttcttcttctt
13
Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
14
Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
gaagaagaagaagaagaagaa
cttcttcttcttcttcttcttcttctt
15
Molecular Genetic Testing
16
Case 1
  • TP-PCR

17
Case 1
  • Modified TP-PCR

Primers FATP-P3-F-FAM FATP-P1-R FATP-P4-F GAA
Int FATP-P4-F GAG Int
18
Case 1
  • Southern Blot

EcoRV FA3PEx1
Patient Normal E/E n/E 1.
2. 3. 4.
19
Case 1
  • ? Clinical Significance
  • Long GAA repeats tracts form abnormal sticky
    triplex DNA structures

20
Case 1
  • ? Clinical Significance
  • Long GAA repeats tracts form abnormal sticky
    triplex DNA structures
  • Inhibit transcription reduced Frataxin protein
  • Interrupted alleles
  • Triplexes less likely to form
  • Not predicted to inhibit transcription of
    Frataxin to the same extent as pure GAA repeats
  • Shorter in length (equivalent to alleles of
    100-300 triplets)
  • May be associated with late on-set disease
  • (GAGGAA)n (GAAAGAA)n interruptions may
    stabilise premutation alleles
  • May prevent expansion into abnormal size range
  • Clear guidelines regarding the implications of
    these interruptions and their clinical
    significance have not been established

21
Case 1
  • ? Clinical Significance
  • Patient
  • 1 normal allele
  • 1 interrupted allele
  • No further mutations identified on sequence
    analysis
  • Unlikely to be affected with FA
  • ? chance finding unrelated to the patients
    symptoms
  • Further work
  • Sequence interrupted allele
  • Detection of interrupted
  • May be difficult using standard TP-PCR
  • Requires contiguous run of GAA repeats

22
Case 2
  • Diagnostic referral
  • 53 year old female
  • Progressive cerebellar degeneration
  • F-PCR analysis identified an allele within the
    premutation range (38 rpts)
  • TP-PCR analysis detected the presence of an
    expansion

23
Case 2
  • Southern blot analysis
  • Confirmed presence of an allele in the
    premutation size range an expanded allele in
    the affected size range

EcoRV FA3PEx1
Patient Normal E/E n/E 1. 2.
3. 4.
24
Case 2
  • ? Clinical Significance
  • Patient
  • 1 allele within premutation size range
  • 1 allele within affected size range
  • Identified in peripheral lymphocytes
  • Premutation alleles
  • Not thought to affect transcription of the
    Frataxin gene
  • Not thought to be pathogenic
  • May show somatic instability
  • ? if a significant proportion of such alleles
    expand into the affected size range in
    appropriate tissues, this may lead to atypical
    disease
  • Increases the likelihood of a diagnosis of FA
  • Further work
  • Testing of other tissue types
  • Family studies

25
Case 3
  • Diagnostic referral
  • 10 year old child
  • Progressive ataxia, weakness, deteriorating motor
    skills, cerebellar dysfunction
  • Two GAA repeat expansions
  • Mother identified as a carrier using standard
    testing strategy
  • Southern blot analysis
  • EcoRV

  • FA3PEx1

1
7 8
23 Kb -
9.4 Kb -
6.5 Kb -
4.3 Kb -
26
Case 3
  • Diagnostic referral
  • 10 year old child
  • Progressive ataxia, weakness, deteriorating motor
    skills, cerebellar dysfunction
  • Mother identified as a carrier using standard
    testing strategy
  • Modified TP-PCR Assay
  • Different locus specific P1-primer

27
Case 3
  • DNA sequencing
  • Primers flanking the standard P1 priming site
  • 30bp deletion
  • Covering the whole of the standard TP-PCR P1
    priming site in the patients father and the
    affected child
  • Deletion present on the same allele as the
    expansion
  • Explains why the expansion in the patients
    father could not be detected using standard
    TP-PCR
  • Summary
  • Samples harbouring such a deletion would give
    results consistent with homozygosity for the same
    size normal allele using these assays
  • Deletion would not be detected - potentially an
    expansion could be missed
  • 115 FA referrals with 1 allele in the normal
    range and no TP-PCR expansion were tested for the
    presence of this deletion
  • No further deletions were identified in this
    cohort
  • Likely that such a deletion is either very
    uncommon or private to this family

28
Acknowledgements
  • All within the molecular genetics laboratory
  • Andrew Purvis
  • Mohammed Kiron Kibria
  • Kara Gaffing
  • Fiona Coyne
  • Roger Mountford

29
Thank-you for listening
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