A Maori - Specific RFC1 pathogenic repeat configuration in CANVAS, likely due to a founder allele

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Abstract

Cerebellar ataxia with neuropathy and bilateral vestibular areflexia syndrome (CANVAS) is a recently recognized neurodegenerative disease with onset in mid- to late adulthood. The genetic basis for a large proportion of Caucasian patients was recently shown to be the biallelic expansion of a pentanucleotide (AAGGG)n repeat in RFC1. Here, we describe the first instance of CANVAS genetic testing in New Zealand M-aori and Cook Island M-aori individuals. We show a novel, possibly population-specific CANVAS configuration (AAAGG)10-25(AAGGG)exp, which was the cause of CANVAS in all patients. There were no apparent phenotypic differences compared with European CANVAS patients. Presence of a common disease haplotype among this cohort suggests this novel repeat expansion configuration is a founder effect in this population, which may indicate that CANVAS will be especially prevalent in this group. Haplotype dating estimated the most recent common ancestor at -1430 CE. We also show the same core haplotype as previously described, supporting a single origin of the CANVAS mutation.

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Beecroft, S. J., Cortese, A., Sullivan, R., Yau, W. Y., Dyer, Z., Wu, T. Y., … Roxburgh, R. H. (2020). A Maori - Specific RFC1 pathogenic repeat configuration in CANVAS, likely due to a founder allele. Brain, 143(9), 2673–2680. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awaa203

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