Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9429366 | Neuroscience Letters | 2005 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are progressive neurodegenerative disorders linked to more than 20 genetic loci. Most often, these diseases are caused by expansion of triplet repeats encoding polyglutamine (polyQ) tracts. The phenotype is variable and can cause a disease that overlaps clinically with Parkinson's disease (PD). l-Dopa-responsive parkinsonism with minimal cerebellar deficits has been described in SCA2 and SCA3. In order to define if mutation at these loci is a common cause of clinically defined parkinsonism we typed the SCA-2 and SCA-3 repeats for expansion in a series of 280 patients diagnosed with PD or parkinsonism. We identified one pathogenic expansion in SCA-2 in a North American family with autosomal dominant parkinsonism.
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Authors
Javier Simon-Sanchez, Melissa Hanson, Amanda Singleton, Dena Hernandez, Aideen McInerney, Robert Nussbaum, John Werner, Marisol Gallardo, Roberto Weiser, Katrina Gwinn-Hardy, Andrew B. Singleton, Jordi Clarimon,