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Title: DNA rearrangements in Japanese facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy patients: clinical correlations. Author: Goto K, Lee JH, Matsuda C, Hirabayashi K, Kojo T, Nakamura A, Mitsunaga Y, Furukawa T, Sahashi K, Arahata K. Journal: Neuromuscul Disord; 1995 May; 5(3):201-8. PubMed ID: 7633185. Abstract: Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an autosomal dominant muscular disorder in which the disease locus has been mapped to chromosome 4q35-qter. In most patients, the DNA rearrangements associated with FSHD have been found in the EcoRI fragment detected by the p13E-11 probe, and deletions of the 3.2 kb repeat units within the fragment are thought to cause the disease. To examine FSHD-associated DNA rearrangements in the Japanese population, we performed Southern blot analysis of the genomic DNA, using the p13E-11 and pFR-1 probes, in 158 Japanese individuals, including 38 FSHD patients from 19 families. We found that all but one (a possible affected recombinant) of the Japanese FSHD patients (97.4%) had specific smaller (< 28 kb) EcoRI fragments which cosegregated with the disease; this included four patients who had severe inflammatory changes in the muscle and eight patients with de novo DNA rearrangements. We found no FSHD patient who had a fragment larger than 28 kb. By contrast, only two of 35 Japanese controls (5.7%) had EcoRI fragments smaller than 28 kb. Our patients showed anticipation, i.e. decreased size of the EcoRI fragment in parallel with earlier onset of the disease (r = 0.531, P = 0.003, with younger age at onset in children (17.8 +/- 7.0) than their affected parents (31.5 +/- 14.8) (P = 0.019). However, since each family had a specific small EcoRI fragment associated with the disease, the differing clinical severity within a family cannot be explained by the size of the fragment alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]