作者
Alan E. Renton,Elisa Majounie,Adrian J. Waite,Javier Simón‐Sánchez,Sara Rollinson,J. Raphael Gibbs,Jennifer C. Schymick,Hannu Laaksovirta,John C. van Swieten,Liisa Myllykangas,Hannu Kalimo,Anders Paetau,Yevgeniya Abramzon,Anne M. Remes,Alice Kaganovich,Sonja W. Scholz,Jaime Duckworth,Jinhui Ding,Daniel W. Harmer,Dena G. Hernandez,Janel O. Johnson,Kin Y. Mok,Mina Ryten,Daniah Trabzuni,Rita Guerreiro,Richard W. Orrell,James Neal,Alex Murray,Justin Pearson,Iris E. Jansen,David Sondervan,Harro Seelaar,Derek J. Blake,Kate Young,Nicola Halliwell,Janis Bennion Callister,Greg Toulson,Anna Richardson,Alexander Gerhard,Julie S. Snowden,David Mann,David Neary,Michael E. Weale,Terhi Peuralinna,Lilja Jansson,Veli‐Matti Isoviita,Anna-Lotta Kaivorinne,Maarit Hölttä‐Vuori,Elina Ikonen,Raimo Sulkava,Michael Benatar,Gang Wu,Adriano Chiò,Gabriella Restagno,Giuseppe Borghero,Mario Sabatelli,David Heckerman,Ekaterina Rogaeva,Lorne Zinman,Jeffrey Statland,Michael Sendtner,Carsten Drepper,Evan E. Eichler,Can Alkan,Ziedulla Abdullaev,Svetlana Pack,Amalia Dutra,Evgenia Pak,John Hardy,Andrew Singleton,Nigel Williams,Peter Heutink,Stuart Pickering‐Brown,Huw R. Morris,Pentti J. Tienari,Bryan J. Traynor
摘要
The chromosome 9p21 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-frontotemporal dementia (ALS-FTD) locus contains one of the last major unidentified autosomal-dominant genes underlying these common neurodegenerative diseases. We have previously shown that a founder haplotype, covering the MOBKL2b, IFNK, and C9ORF72 genes, is present in the majority of cases linked to this region. Here we show that there is a large hexanucleotide (GGGGCC) repeat expansion in the first intron of C9ORF72 on the affected haplotype. This repeat expansion segregates perfectly with disease in the Finnish population, underlying 46.0% of familial ALS and 21.1% of sporadic ALS in that population. Taken together with the D90A SOD1 mutation, 87% of familial ALS in Finland is now explained by a simple monogenic cause. The repeat expansion is also present in one-third of familial ALS cases of outbred European descent, making it the most common genetic cause of these fatal neurodegenerative diseases identified to date.