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A Family with Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 8 Expansion and Vitamin E Deficiency Ataxia

Overview
Journal Arch Neurol
Specialty Neurology
Date 2002 Dec 10
PMID 12470185
Citations 2
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Abstract

Background: Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency is a recessive autosomal neurodegenerative disorder resembling the Friedreich ataxia phenotype but is due to mutations in the alpha-tocopherol transfer protein (TTPA) gene. In a recent article, we described a patient with ataxia carrying reduced serum vitamin E levels and showing CTA/CTG expansions of 320 triplet repeats in the SCA8 gene.

Objectives: To perform a screening of the TTPA gene in the patient and to evaluate the effects of treatment with vitamin E on the patient's neurologic disturbances.

Patient And Methods: We performed a single-strand conformation polymorphism and nucleotide sequence analysis of the 5 exons of the TTPA gene in the patient's family members.

Results: The results indicated the patient to be a compound heterozygote for 2 mutations (in exon 3), each transmitted by one of the 2 parents, yielding a nonfunctional protein.

Conclusions: We describe for the first time, to our knowledge, a mutated form of the TTPA gene in a patient also carrying an expansion in the SCA8 gene. The lack of improvement in the patient's symptoms on supplementation with alpha-tocopherol suggests that the SCA8 mutations may act in the neurodegeneration process, worsening the neurologic signs caused by the vitamin E deficit, and it could be speculated that the co-occurrence of mutant alleles for 2 distinct loci may influence the clinical course of the disease.

Citing Articles

Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency: update of molecular diagnosis.

Di Donato I, Bianchi S, Federico A Neurol Sci. 2010; 31(4):511-5.

PMID: 20464573 DOI: 10.1007/s10072-010-0261-1.


Spinocerebellar ataxia type 8: molecular genetic comparisons and haplotype analysis of 37 families with ataxia.

Ikeda Y, Dalton J, Moseley M, Gardner K, Bird T, Ashizawa T Am J Hum Genet. 2004; 75(1):3-16.

PMID: 15152344 PMC: 1182005. DOI: 10.1086/422014.