Pathogenic Huntingtin Repeat Expansions in Patients with Frontotemporal Dementia and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

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  • Pathogenic

    Final published version, 3.59 MB, PDF document

  • Ramita Dewan
  • Ruth Chia
  • Jinhui Ding
  • Richard A. Hickman
  • Thor D. Stein
  • Yevgeniya Abramzon
  • Sarah Ahmed
  • Marya S. Sabir
  • Makayla K. Portley
  • Arianna Tucci
  • Kristina Ibáñez
  • F. N.U. Shankaracharya
  • Pamela Keagle
  • Giacomina Rossi
  • Paola Caroppo
  • Fabrizio Tagliavini
  • Maria L. Waldo
  • Per M. Johansson
  • Christer F. Nilsson
  • Adelani Adeleye
  • Camille Alba
  • Dagmar Bacikova
  • Daniel N. Hupalo
  • Elisa Mc Grath Martinez
  • Harvey B. Pollard
  • Gauthaman Sukumar
  • Anthony R. Soltis
  • Meila Tuck
  • Xijun Zhang
  • Matthew D. Wilkerson
  • Bradley N. Smith
  • Nicola Ticozzi
  • Claudia Fallini
  • Athina Soragia Gkazi
  • Simon D. Topp
  • Jason Kost
  • Emma L. Scotter
  • Kevin P. Kenna
  • Jack W. Miller
  • Cinzia Tiloca
  • Caroline Vance
  • Eric W. Danielson
  • Claire Troakes
  • Claudia Colombrita
  • Safa Al-Sarraj
  • Elizabeth A. Lewis
  • Nielsen, Jørgen Erik
  • Lynne E. Hjermind
  • Regina H. Reynolds
  • Rowe, James Benedict
  • The PROSPECT Consortium
  • The American Genome Center (TAGC)
  • The FALS Sequencing Consortium
  • The Genomics England Research Consortium
  • The International ALS/FTD Genomics Consortium (iAFGC)
  • The International FTD Genetics Consortium (IFGC)
  • The International LBD Genomics Consortium (iLBDGC), The NYGC ALS Consortium
  • the University of Maryland Brain and Tissue Bank and NIH NeuroBioBank

We examined the role of repeat expansions in the pathogenesis of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) by analyzing whole-genome sequence data from 2,442 FTD/ALS patients, 2,599 Lewy body dementia (LBD) patients, and 3,158 neurologically healthy subjects. Pathogenic expansions (range, 40–64 CAG repeats) in the huntingtin (HTT) gene were found in three (0.12%) patients diagnosed with pure FTD/ALS syndromes but were not present in the LBD or healthy cohorts. We replicated our findings in an independent collection of 3,674 FTD/ALS patients. Postmortem evaluations of two patients revealed the classical TDP-43 pathology of FTD/ALS, as well as huntingtin-positive, ubiquitin-positive aggregates in the frontal cortex. The neostriatal atrophy that pathologically defines Huntington's disease was absent in both cases. Our findings reveal an etiological relationship between HTT repeat expansions and FTD/ALS syndromes and indicate that genetic screening of FTD/ALS patients for HTT repeat expansions should be considered.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNeuron
Volume109
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)448-460
Number of pages13
ISSN0896-6273
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020

    Research areas

  • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, frontotemporal dementia, huntingtin, repeat expansions, whole-genome sequencing

ID: 304154915