Instability of a 550-base pair DNA segment and abnormal methylation in fragile X syndrome

I Oberle, F Rousseau, D Heitz, C Kretz, D Devys… - Science, 1991 - science.org
I Oberle, F Rousseau, D Heitz, C Kretz, D Devys, A Hanauer, J Boue, MF Bertheas…
Science, 1991science.org
The fragile X syndrome, a common cause of inherited mental retardation, is characterized by
an unusual mode of inheritance. Phenotypic expression has been linked to abnormal
cytosine methylation of a single CpG island, at or very near the fragile site. Probes adjacent
to this island detected very localized DNA rearrangements that constituted the fragile X
mutations, and whose target was a 550-base pair GC-rich fragment. Normal transmitting
males had a 150-to 400-base pair insertion that was inherited by their daughters either …
The fragile X syndrome, a common cause of inherited mental retardation, is characterized by an unusual mode of inheritance. Phenotypic expression has been linked to abnormal cytosine methylation of a single CpG island, at or very near the fragile site. Probes adjacent to this island detected very localized DNA rearrangements that constituted the fragile X mutations, and whose target was a 550-base pair GC-rich fragment. Normal transmitting males had a 150- to 400-base pair insertion that was inherited by their daughters either unchanged, or with small differences in size. Fragile X-positive individuals in the next generation had much larger fragments that differed among siblings and showed a generally heterogeneous pattern indicating somatic mutation. The mutated allele appeared unmethylated in normal transmitting males, methylated only on the inactive X chromosome in their daughters, and totally methylated in most fragile X males. However, some males had a mosaic pattern. Expression of the fragile X syndrome thus appears to result from a two-step mutation as well as a highly localized methylation. Carriers of the fragile X mutation can easily be detected regardless of sex or phenotypic expression, and rare apparent false negatives may result from genetic heterogeneity or misdiagnosis.
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