4.7 Article

C9ORF72 repeat expansion in clinical and neuropathologic frontotemporal dementia cohorts

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 10, Pages 995-1001

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182684634

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Neuroscience Research Australia
  2. University of New South Wales
  3. NHMRC
  4. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) (Australia) [630428, 1005769]
  5. NHMRC [1005769, 605530, 1008307, 1022325, 1029538, 510148, 510186, 570850, 401184, 568807, 630574, 1023202, 510106]
  6. Senior Principal Research Fellowship [630434]
  7. Michael J Fox Foundation
  8. Shake-it-up Australia
  9. Australian Research Council (ARC) [LE100100074]
  10. NHMRC & ARC Joint Program Grant [401162]
  11. Garvan Institute of Medical Research [PCT/AU98/00439]
  12. ARC Grant [LP0883261]
  13. NIH [1U01 AG032438-01, 1R01 NS052470-01A2]
  14. Beyondblue National Priority Driven Research Project Grant [00226]
  15. Wicking Trust Grant [13026]
  16. ARC Federation Fellowship [FF0776229]

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Objective: To determine the frequency of a hexanucleotide repeat expansion in C9ORF72, a gene of unknown function implicated in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), in Australian FTD patient cohorts and to examine the clinical and neuropathologic phenotypes associated with this expansion. Methods: We examined a clinically ascertained FTD cohort (n = 89) and a neuropathologically ascertained cohort of frontotemporal lobar degeneration cases with TDP-43 pathology (FTLD-TDP) (n = 22) for the C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansion using a repeat primed PCR assay. All expansion-positive patients were genotyped for rs3849942, a surrogate marker for the chromosome 9p21 risk haplotype previously associated with FTD and ALS. Results: The C9ORF72 repeat expansion was detected in 10% of patients in the clinically diagnosed cohort, rising to 29% in those with a positive family history of early-onset dementia or ALS. The prevalence of psychotic features was significantly higher in expansion-positive cases (56% vs 14%). In the pathology cohort, 41% of TDP-43-positive cases harbored the repeat expansion, and all exhibited type B pathology. One of the 17 expansion-positive probands was homozygous for the nonrisk G allele of rs3849942. Conclusions: The C9ORF72 repeat expansion is a relatively common cause of FTD in Australian populations, and is especially common in those with FTD-ALS, psychotic features, and a strong family history. Detection of a repeat expansion on the 9p21 putative nonrisk haplotype suggests that not all mutation carriers are necessarily descended from a common founder and indicates that the expansion may have occurred on multiple haplotype backgrounds. Neurology (R) 2012;79:995-1001

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