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1.
BACKGROUND: Dystonia is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous movement disorder characterized by sustained muscle contractions affecting one or more sites of the body, frequently causing twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal postures. A 3-base pair (GAG) deletion in the DYT1 gene is held responsible for most cases of early-onset primary generalized dystonia in the Ashkenazi Jewish population as well as in non-Jewish patients. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the prevalence of the GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene and the phenotypic variability in the general population by testing patients with different subtypes of dystonia from 4 different movement disorder outpatient clinics in Germany. METHODS: Two hundred fifty-six patients were tested for the GAG deletion mutation in the DYT1 gene by means of published primers and polymerase chain reaction amplification to determine GAG deletion status. RESULTS: Six of the 256 patients did carry the GAG-deletion in the DYT1 gene. However, only 2 of the 6 mutation carriers presented with what is thought to represent classic features of early-onset primary generalized dystonia. The DYT1 mutation was also detected in 2 patients with multifocal dystonia, 1 of them presenting with involvement of cranial and cervical muscles, and in 2 patients with writer's cramp of both hands with only slight progression. Our findings demonstrate that the mutation may be associated with not only generalized but also segmental and multifocal forms of dystonia. CONCLUSIONS: Our data underline the wide range of phenotypic variability of the DYT1 mutation. A priori prediction of the mutation carrier status in dystonic patients and genetic counseling of affected families with respect to the clinical manifestation may prove difficult.  相似文献   

2.
Clinical-genetic studies of idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD) indicate that the DYT1 gene on chromosome 9q34 is responsible for most childhood limb-onset disease. The genetic basis of adult-onset ITD is less well studied. In most multiplex adult-onset ITD families, dystonia is limited to the cervical, cranial, or brachial muscles; in a few rare families, dystonia also involves the legs and trunk. Previous linkage studies have excluded the DYT1 locus in these atypical families. We studied two large non-Jewish families with adult-onset ITD limited to the cervical and brachial muscles and excluded the DYT1-containing region. This study further restricts the role of DYT1 to childhood limb-onset ITD and suggests that other genes are responsible for focal adult-onset ITD.  相似文献   

3.
The DYT1 locus on chromosome 9q34 is responsible for most childhood limb-onset idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD). Linkage to DYT1 has been excluded in families with adult-onset, and predominantly cranial–cervical, ITD. We mapped a locus (DYT6) associated with prominent cranial–cervical ITD in two large Mennonite families to chromosome 8. An identical haplotype spanning 40?cM segregates with ITD in these families, suggesting a shared mutation from the recent past.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Dystonia is a heterogenous group of movement disorders whose clinical spectrum is very wide. At least 13 different genes and gene loci have been reported. While a 3-bp deletion in the DYT1 gene is the most frequent cause of early limb-onset, generalized dystonia, it has also been found in non-generalized forms of sporadic dystonia. An 18-bp deletion in the DYT1 gene has also been reported. OBJECTIVES: We screened for the 3-bp and 18-bp deletions in the DYT1 gene among our sporadic, adult-onset primary dystonia patients in Singapore. We reviewed the literature to compare the frequency of DYT1 mutation between the East and the West. METHODS: We screened 54 patients with primary dystonia (focal: n=41; segmental: n=11; multifocal: n=1; generalized: n=1) for the deletions in the DYT1 gene. A careful review of all published literature on DYT1 screening among sporadic, non-familial, non-Ashkenazi Jewish patients was done. RESULTS: We did not detect any mutations in the exon 5 of the DYT1 gene in any of our patients. The frequency of DYT1 mutation amongst Asians (1.0%) was comparable to the West (1.56%) (p=NS). CONCLUSIONS: DYT1 mutations are uncommon amongst adult primary dystonia patients in Singapore.  相似文献   

5.
Primary torsion dystonia (PTD) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous movement disorder. A GAG deletion at position 946 in the DYT1 gene is responsible for most cases of autosomal dominant early-onset PTD. We analysed the DYT1 mutation in 50 patients from a Serbian population, selected according to the proposed guidelines for diagnostic testing: (a) 38 patients with PTD onset < 26 years, and (b) 12 patients with the disease onset ± 26 years, but with at least one affected family member with early-onset dystonia. Only three apparently sporadic patients among the 50 individuals tested were positive for the GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene: one with typical, generalized, one with long-lasting, non-progressive segmental, and one with multifocal dystonia. Molecular analysis of relatives in 2 families revealed that the lack of family history was due to reduced penetrance. Received: 29 December 2000, Received in revised form: 23 March 2001, Accepted: 10 April 2001  相似文献   

6.
A 3-base pair (GAG) deletion in the DYT1 gene has recently been found to be responsible for most cases of early-onset primary generalized dystonia. In some cases, this mutation has been associated with writer's cramp. To determine the frequency of this mutation in a larger series of patients, we examined 44 index patients with sporadic or familial (seven patients) writer's cramp for the presence of the DYT1 GAG deletion, including eight patients with segmental dystonia involving at least one upper limb. We found the mutation in none of these index patients, which confirms that isolated writer's cramp is only in rare cases a phenotypic manifestation of this mutation, even if a positive family history of writer's cramp is present.  相似文献   

7.
The GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene usually causes a typical form of primary torsion dystonia (PTD) with early onset in a limb, rapid generalization, and sparing of cranial-cervical muscles, but atypical phenotypes have often been reported. Here, we describe a large DYT1 Italian family with phenotypically heterogeneous PTD that recapitulates all the atypical features associated with the DYT1 mutation, including late age at onset, focal or segmental phenotypes, onset or spreading of dystonia to the cranial-cervical muscles. Of 38 healthy family members, 15 also carried the DYT1 mutation, with an estimated penetrance of 21%. A literature review of atypical familial cases of DYT1-PTD showed that late onset, cervical involvement, and limited progression of dystonia are features frequently seen in DYT1 families. However, nearly all of these atypical patients fall within at least one of the clinical categories that best predict the DYT1 carrier status, namely, early onset, onset in a limb, and family history positive for early-onset dystonia.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Idiopathic torsion dystonia is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous movement disorder. A GAG deletion at position 946 of the DYT1 gene was the first mutation found, in early-onset dystonia, with an autosomal dominant transmission and reduced penetrance. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the frequency of the DYT1 mutation in patients with idiopathic torsion dystonia but without a family history. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Four botulinum toxin clinics in the Paris, France, area. PATIENTS: A French population of 100 patients with dystonia. MAIN OUTCOME: Frequency of the DYT1 mutation tested by polymerase chain reaction and enzyme restriction analysis for the 946 GAG deletion, and genotype-to-phenotype correlation. RESULTS: Only 5 mutation carriers were identified, 4 of whom were part of a group of 10 patients with generalized dystonia. Onset was between ages 5 and 12 years as in typical early-onset dystonia. All 4 patients had cranial muscle involvement, which is atypical for DYT1 mutation carriers. One had segmental dystonia. Molecular analysis of relatives in 2 families demonstrated that the lack of family history was due to reduced penetrance. CONCLUSIONS: For accurate diagnosis and genetic counseling, screening for the DYT1 deletion is of great interest in cases with generalized dystonia without a family history. In other cases, positive results are rare.  相似文献   

9.
Most cases of early-onset primary torsion dystonia are caused by the same 3-bp (GAG) deletion in the DYT1 gene. We describe a large Serbian family with significant intrafamilial variability of the DYT1 phenotype, from asymptomatic carrier status to late-onset focal, and generalized jerky dystonia. Seven mutation carriers (six proven by direct analysis and one by inferred haplotype) were identified, but only two of them were affected by dystonia (penetrance reduced to 29%). In addition, three GAG-deletion-negative family members also developed dystonia (two multifocal dystonia and one torticollis), suggesting that their involuntary movements are due to some other etiological factor(s) (i.e., another dystonia gene), or may be psychogenic.  相似文献   

10.
Primary dystonia (PrD) is characterized by sustained muscle contractions, causing twisting and repetitive movements and abnormal postures. Besides DYT1/TOR1A gene, DYT6/THAP1 gene is the second gene known to cause primary pure dystonia. We screened 281 Serbian primary dystonia patients and 106 neurologically healthy control individuals for the GAG deletion in TOR1A gene and for mutations in THAP1 gene by direct sequencing. Nine subjects were found to have the GAG deletion in TOR1A gene. Four coding mutations, including two novel mutations, were identified in the THAP1 gene in five unrelated patients. Two mutations were missense, one was nonsense, and one was 24 bp duplication. None of the coding mutations were seen in 106 control individuals. In addition, one novel nucleotide change in the 5′UTR region of THAP1 gene was detected in two unrelated patients. The mutation frequency of THAP1 gene in Serbian patients with primary dystonia was 1.8 %, similar to the mutation frequency in other populations. Most of the patients reported here with THAP1 mutations had the clinical features of predominantly laryngeal or oromandibular dystonia. Our data expand the genotypic spectrum of THAP1 and strengthen the association with upper body involvement, including the cranial and cervical regions that are usually spared in DYT1-PrD.  相似文献   

11.
DYT1 mutation in Japanese patients with primary torsion dystonia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A GAG deletion at position 946 in the DYT1 gene has been identified as one of the gene mutations responsible for autosomal dominant primary torsion dystonia. We examined 178 Japanese patients with various forms of dystonia, and found the mutation in six patients (3.4%) from three families. Five of them had early clinical onset (before age 12) with initial involvement of a limb. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the frequency and the clinical features of DYT1 mutation in oriental patients, and the clinical presentation of the mutation in these patients was similar to that of Jewish or non-Jewish Caucasian patients.  相似文献   

12.
Primary torsion dystonia (PTD) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of movement disorders, usually inherited in an autosomal dominant manner with reduced (30-40%) penetrance. The DYT1 gene on chromosome 9q34 is responsible for most cases of early limb-onset PTD. DYT1-PTD clinical spectrum is broad, as the disease may present with several degrees of body involvement and severity. We identified an Italian family with 4 members definitely affected by PTD, genetically diagnosed as carriers of the GAG mutation at DYT1 gene. Phenotype was homogeneous when considering the presentation at onset (limb involvement and early onset), the disease progression was variable; in the subjects of the last generation, the disease progressed to a severe, generalized PTD; in the remaining 2 subjects, dystonia presented with writer's cramp or upper body segmental dystonia of mild severity. One family member, carrier of the GAG mutation on DYT1 gene and mother of the most severely affected individual, presented with a clinically established psychogenic movement disorder resembling dystonia initially diagnosed as a severe generalized PTD. Psychogenic movement disorders are among the most controversial and challenging diseases to diagnose, in particular when the affected individual belongs to a family with an inherited movement disorder.  相似文献   

13.
Recently, the mutation causing early-onset generalized torsion dystonia has been identified as a GAG deletion in the gene for an adenosine triphosphate–binding protein named torsinA. We describe a German family with 5 clinically affected individuals carrying this mutation. In at least 4 of the 5 patients, the disease presented as a dystonic writer's cramp during late childhood or adolescence, which affected sequentially both sides but did not progress to a generalized form of dystonia. We conclude that familial writer's cramp may be a manifestation of the DYT1 mutation.  相似文献   

14.
DYT1 primary torsion dystonia is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by deletion of a GAG triplet in exon 5 of the DYT1 gene. A significant proportion of individuals with early-onset generalized dystonia is believed to be DYT1 mutation carriers. We assessed the frequency of the GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene in a group of 61 Polish probands with clinical diagnosis of primary dystonia. The deletion was identified in four probands presenting with early-onset generalized disease (7%). Further studies in probands' families revealed two symptomatic and nine asymptomatic mutation carriers. We tested all mutation-positive individuals for the presence of some common polymorphisms within the DYT1 gene. Two of the 15 mutation-positive individuals additionally carried polymorphisms in 3'-UTR of the gene. Early onset in a limb and progression toward a generalized form, but not family history of dystonia, are indicative of DYT1 dystonia in Polish dystonic individuals.  相似文献   

15.
DYT1 mutation in a cohort of Taiwanese primary dystonias   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To investigate the DYT1 gene mutation in Chinese ethnic, we examined a series of 200 patients with primary dystonias (11 familial and 189 sporadic), 53 of their asymptomatic relatives, 97 patients with familial or early-onset parkinsonism, and 200 healthy subjects. The GAG deletion at codon 946 was only found in three sporadic dystonia patients and seven of their asymptomatic familial members. The frequency of GAG deletion was 1.5% in dystonia patients, and was 6.7% in early-onset dystonias (< or = 26 years). We conclude that DYT1 mutation is a minor cause of primary dystonias in a cohort of Taiwanese population.  相似文献   

16.
In a recent GCH1 mutation screen, an 18‐bp deletion was identified within the proximal promoter in two patients with early‐onset Parkinson's disease. The mutation removes cAMP response element critical for adequate GTP cyclohydrolase I activity in selected cell types, including dopaminergic neurons, but its biological significance was unclear as it was also detected in one control individual. We present an 11‐year‐old boy with infantile‐onset severe dystonic encephalopathy without hyperphenylalaninemia whom we found compound heterozygous for the same promoter GCH1 deletion and another common missense mutation associated with classical dopa‐responsive dystonia. Extensive diagnostic work up excluded other causes of dystonia, and comprehensive mutation scan did not reveal any additional GCH1 sequence variations, supporting the association between the promoter deletion and disease phenotype. © 2010 Movement Disorder Society  相似文献   

17.
A GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene accounts for most early, limb onset primary torsion dystonia (PTD). The genetic bases for the more common adult onset and focal PTD are less well delineated. Genetic loci for an "intermediate dystonia" phenotype and for torticollis, named DYT6 and DYT7 respectively, have recently been mapped in single families. To evaluate the contribution of these genetic loci to other families with familial "non-DYT1" dystonia five large families with dystonia were studied using genetic markers spanning the DYT6 and DYT7 regions. There was no evidence of linkage to either locus in any family. These findings illustrate the genetic heterogeneity of the dystonias and indicate the existence of one or more as yet unmapped genes for dystonia. Large collaborative efforts will be required to identify these, and additional genes, causing PTD.  相似文献   

18.
DYT-1 dystonia is the most common primary dystonia seen in childhood. It is an autosomal dominantly inherited disorder caused by deletion of a GAG triplet in exon 5 of the DYT1 gene. It characteristically starts in a distal limb during late childhood, subsequently spreads to involve other body regions sparing oromandibular muscles. However, clinical presentation can vary remarkably with respect to age, site of onset and progression. In this study we present three early-onset DYT-1 dystonia patients who are atypical according to age of onset and localization. Dystonia has started at 2, 3 and 7 years of age and generalized to involve other limbs in all patients and also oromandibular muscles in one patient. None of them have benefited from medical treatments including L-dopa. All had normal brain MRI scan, a history of normal birth without significant perinatal asphyxia, infection or trauma and all are neurodevelopmentally otherwise normal. Conclusion: In children with dystonia; if brain imaging is unremarkable and when there is no history of CNS disorders such as perinatal asphyxia, infections, drug exposure or trauma; genetic analysis for GAG deletion of DYT-1 gene may be performed even if dystonia starts at a very young age or it spreads to involve oromandibular muscles.  相似文献   

19.
Task‐specific focal upper limb dystonia can be part of the phenotypic spectrum of different types of hereditary dystonia. We investigated whether writer's cramp as presenting symptom is associated with mutations in DYT11, DYT16, or with the DYT1 GAG deletion in 43 patients. No DYT11 and DYT16 mutations were identified. One patient carried the GAG deletion in the DYT1 gene. In our cohort, writer's cramp as presenting symptom is not associated with mutations in DYT11, DYT16, but it can be the sole manifestation of DYT1 GAG deletion mutation carriers. © 2009 Movement Disorder Society  相似文献   

20.
A gene (DYT1) for idiopathic torsion dystonia maps to chromosome 9q34 in Ashkenazi Jewish families with early onset of symptoms. Further, there is linkage disequilibrium between DYT1 and a particular haplotype of alleles at 9q34 loci in this population. This implies that a large proportion of early-onset idiopathic torsion dystonia in Ashkenazi Jews is due to a founder mutation in DYT1. To characterize the phenotypic range of this mutation, we studied 174 Ashkenazi Jewish individuals affected with idiopathic torsion dystonia. We used GT(n) markers on chromosome 9q34 (D9S62, D9S63, and ASS) and classified individuals as having (“carriers”), not having (“noncarriers”), or being ambiguous with respect to a DYT1-associated haplotype. We assessed clinical features and found marked clinical differences between haplotype carriers and noncarriers. There were 90 carriers, 70 noncarriers, and 14 ambiguous individuals. The mean age at onset of symptoms was significantly lower in carriers than in noncarriers (12.5 ± 8.2 vs 36.5 ± 16.4 years). In 94% of carriers, symptoms began in a limb (arm or leg equally); rarely the disorder started in the neck (3.3%) or larynx (2.2%). In contrast, the neck, larynx, and other cranial muscles were the sites of onset in 79% of noncarriers; onset in the arms occurred in 21% and onset in the legs never occurred. Limb onset, leg involvement in the course of disease, and age at onset distinguished haplotype carriers from noncarriers with 90% accuracy. In conclusion, there are clinical differences between Ashkenazi Jewish individuals with idiopathic torsion dystonia who do or do not have a unique DYT1 mutation, as determined by a DYT1-associated haplotype of 9q34 alleles. These differences suggest that early, limb-onset idiopathic torsion dystonia and late, cervical cranial–onset idiopathic torsion dystonia are genetically distinct entities.  相似文献   

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