Cloning and expression of the rat atrophin-i (drpla disease gene) homologue

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Abstract

Dentatorubral pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) is a rare, progressive, fatal neuropsychiatric disorder similar to Huntington’s disease, caused by an expansion of a CAG trinucleotide repeat encoding glutamine. We have cloned the cDNA of the rat homologue of this gene. The cDNA contains a 3549 base pair open reading frame that is 88.2% identical to the human cDNA, with a predicted amino acid sequence that is 93.6% identical to the human sequence. The consecutive glutamine repeat is only five residues in length (normal range in human: 7-35 glutamines) and is followed by a polymorphic region of alternating glutamine and proline residues (QQQQQPQPQPQPQQ). The sequence also includes a polymorphic proline repeat, a serine repeat, and a region of alternating acidic and basic residues. Northern analysis and in situ hybridization indicate that the gene is widely expressed as a 4.5 kb mRNA, with a neuronal distribution in the brain. The widespread expression of this gene is consistent with the possibility that DRPLA, like other glutamine repeat diseases, is a result of an abnormality at the protein level. © 1994 Academic Press. All rights reserved.

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Loev, S. J., Margolis, R. L., Young, W. S., Li, S. H., Schilling, G., Ashworth, R. G., & Ross, C. A. (1995). Cloning and expression of the rat atrophin-i (drpla disease gene) homologue. Neurobiology of Disease, 2(3), 129–138. https://doi.org/10.1006/nbdi.1995.0014

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