Title: An elusive expansion at the FRDA locus
1An 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
2Presentation 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
3Friedreich 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
4FRDA
- 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
5Genetics 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
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- 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
6Genetics 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
7Molecular Genetic Testing
- Detection of GAA repeats
-
- Current testing strategy
- F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
primers
8Molecular Genetic Testing
- Detection of GAA repeats
-
- Current testing strategy
- F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
primers
n/n (8/29 repeats)
n/?
9Molecular Genetic Testing
- Detection of GAA repeats
-
- Current testing strategy
- F-PCR across repeat region with FAM-labelled
primers - Triplet-prime PCR
n
E
10Case 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
11Case 1
8 repeats
Patient 1.
31 rpt control 2.
Expansion control 3.
Hom Het normal controls 4. 5.
12Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
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13Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
14Molecular Genetic Testing
Triplet-prime PCR
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15Molecular Genetic Testing
16Case 1
17Case 1
Primers FATP-P3-F-FAM FATP-P1-R FATP-P4-F GAA
Int FATP-P4-F GAG Int
18Case 1
EcoRV FA3PEx1
Patient Normal E/E n/E 1.
2. 3. 4.
19Case 1
- ? Clinical Significance
- Long GAA repeats tracts form abnormal sticky
triplex DNA structures
20Case 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
21Case 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
22Case 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
23Case 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.
24Case 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
25Case 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 -
26Case 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
27Case 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
28Acknowledgements
- All within the molecular genetics laboratory
- Andrew Purvis
- Mohammed Kiron Kibria
- Kara Gaffing
- Fiona Coyne
- Roger Mountford
29 Thank-you for listening