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Machado Joseph disease is not an allele of the spinocerebellar ataxia 2 locus
Authors:Elspeth C Twist  Lindsay A Farrer  Patrick M Macleod  Joao Radvany  Susan Chamberlain  Roger N Rosenberg  Guy A Rouleau
Institution:(1) Centre for Research in Neuroscience, McGill University and the Montreal General Hospital Research Institute, Montreal, Canada;(2) Department of Neurology and School of Public Health, Boston University School of Medicine and the Department of Neurology, Harvard University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA;(3) Section of Genetics, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Victoria General Hospital, Victoria, Canada;(4) Neurologia Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, Sao Paulo, Brazil;(5) Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, St Mary's Hospital Medical School, Norfolk Place, London, UK;(6) Department of Neurology, University of Texas Health Sciences Centre, Dallas, Texas, USA;(7) 1650 Ceder Ave., H3G 1A4 Montreal, PQ, Canada
Abstract:Machado Joseph disease (MJD) is a progressive, spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) with an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance and almost complete penetrance. Clinically, it is difficult to distinguish it from other autosomal dominantly inherited ataxias, and it has been suggested that MJD may be caused by an allelic variant of SCA. Exclusion of MJD from the SCA1 locus on chromosome 6p has previously been demonstrated. However, following the recent assignment of a second locus for spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA2) to chromosome 12q in a large Cuban kindred of Spanish origin, we have investigated linkage in MJD families using the two markers, D12S58 and PLA2, that flank this disease gene. The MJD locus was definitively excluded from an interval spanning approximately 70 cM, which includes these loci. These studies demonstrate that MJD and SCA2 are genetically distinct despite similarities in disease phenotype and ancestral origins of the patients. Thus, the as yet unmapped MJD locus represents a third SCA locus, providing further evidence for genetic heterogeneity within these disorders.
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