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Direct molecular diagnosis of myotonic dystrophy
Author(s) -
Hecht B. K.,
Donnelly A.,
Gedeon A. K.,
Byard R. W.,
Haan E. A.,
Mulley J. G.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
clinical genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.543
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1399-0004
pISSN - 0009-9163
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-0004.1993.tb03819.x
Subject(s) - myotonic dystrophy , genetics , myotonia , locus (genetics) , ecori , biology , offspring , trinucleotide repeat expansion , prenatal diagnosis , family history , gene , pathology , medicine , fetus , pregnancy , allele , restriction enzyme
Hecht BK, Donnelly A, Gedeon AK, Byard RW, Haan EA, Mulley JC. Direct molecular diagnosis of myotonic dystrophy. Clin Genet 1993: 43: 276–285. © Munksgaard, 1993 Myotonic dystrophy (DM) arises from an unstable trinucleotide (CTG n ) repeat sequence within the DM locus at 19q13.3. Twenty‐three myotonic dystrophy families containing 205 persons with no symptoms, minimal manifestations, classic DM or congenital DM were investigated to validate the application of the pM10M6 probe to direct molecular diagnosis. Affected family members had been diagnosed clinically and the unaffected family members had been assigned carrier probabilities close to either zero or 100%, using closely linked flanking markers. Southern analysis identified all 89 DM gene carriers as having expansions of the unstable element. Pst I detected all small expansions of the repeat sequence as easily seen discrete bands; but large expansions were usually seen as diffuse smears, sometimes difficult to distinguish from lane background. Eco RI concentrated these diffuse smears, associated with somatic instability, into discrete bands which were easy to detect; but it did not resolve the smaller expansions present in 9 (10%) of the DM carriers. It is essential that Pst I and Eco RI gels are run in parallel to detect all DM gene carriers. The extent of expansion of CTG correlated with age of onset and disease severity. Biopsies of various fetal tissues from two terminated pregnancies confirmed the diagnosis obtained by CVS and revealed no heterogeneity between tissues at this developmental stage. Further expansion occurred during the culture of CVS cells, indicating that direct prenatal diagnosis needs to be carried out on CVS tissue rather than on cultured cells. The intergenerational change of the repeat sequence from DM parent to DM offspring showed a significant parental sex difference for those parents with large expansions. Contraction of the unstable element was observed in the three males carrying the largest expansions and could explain why congenital DM is exclusively of maternal origin.

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