Polymorphisms in the CAG repeat - A source of error in Huntington disease DNA testing

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Abstract

Five of 400 patients (1.3%), referred for Huntington disease DNA testing, demonstrated a single allele on CAG alone, but two alleles when the CAG + CCG repeats were measured. The PCR assay failed to detect one allele in the CAG alone assay because of single-base silent polymorphisms in the penultimate or the last CAG repeat. The region around and within the CAG repeat sequence in the Huntington disease gene is a hot-spot for DNA polymorphisms, which can occur in up to 1% of subjects tested for Huntington disease. These polymorphisms may interfere with amplification by PCR, and so have the potential to produce a diagnostic error.

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Yu, S., Fimmel, A., Fung, D., Trent, R. J., & Trent, R. (2000). Polymorphisms in the CAG repeat - A source of error in Huntington disease DNA testing. Clinical Genetics, 58(6), 469–472. https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1399-0004.2000.580607.x

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