Sandra Van
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HIGHLIGHTS: So far, five spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) genes have been identified. The ataxia caused by the SCA 10 gene localized by the Cedars-Sinai team is different from the other ataxias. One of these, the occurrence of seizures in 20 percent of family members suffering from the disease, indicates a possible link with epilepsy. Further study of the new gene is expected to shed new light not only on ataxia, a relatively rare inherited disease that affects one in 10,000 persons, but also on the pathogenesis of epilepsy, a condition that affects one in 100.
AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEWS: Stefan-M. Pulst, M.D, director of the Cedars-Sinai Division of Neurology; holder of the Carmen and Louis Warschaw Chair in Neurology; director of the Cedars-Sinai Neurogenetics Laboratory; and scientific director of the Parkinson's Disease Research and Treatment Center at Cedars-Sinai
CEDARS-SINAI SCIENTISTS LOCALIZE NEW ATAXIA/EPILEPSY GENE
LOS ANGELES (Feb. 17, 1999) -- Neurogeneticists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles have localized SCA10, a gene involved with a rare form of inherited ataxia, a disease whose onset usually comes in early adulthood and that causes incoordination of gait and movement. The finding is reported in the February issue of the American Journal of Human Genetics.
Five spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) genes had been previously identified by various research groups, including SCA2, which, like SCA10, was found by the Cedars-Sinai team of Stefan-M. Pulst, M.D. Like SCA2, SCA 10 shows anticipation, a phenomenon whereby onset of the disease is earlier and earlier with each successive generation. The presence of anticipation may provide an important clue for the isolation of the gene, since it may indicate that the genetic defect is caused by unstable DNA repeats.
In contrast to other inherited ataxias, however, 20 percent of members of the family affected by the ataxia suffered seizures. "This connection makes isolation of the genetic defect so exciting", says Dr. Pulst, "because it will likely shed light on the much more common epilepsies."
It was approximately a year ago that the Pulst team identified the Mexican-American family exhibiting the rare form of ataxia. They have now been able to localize the SCA10 gene on the long arm of chromosome 22 by conducting a search that included some 300 genetic markers covering the entire human genome. It was the 40th of these that suggested the researchers were in the right region. Interestingly, the new gene is not close either to other ataxia genes, or to any for epilepsy.
Whereas it took the team 5 years to identify the prior ataxia gene, they expect to identify SCA10 as soon as two years from now, thanks to advances in the Human Genome Project.
Dr. Pulst is director of the Cedars-Sinai Division of Neurology since 1993 and became holder of the Carmen and Louis Warschaw Chair in Neurology in 1991. He is also director of the Cedars-Sinai Neurogenetics Laboratory, scientific director of the Parkinson's Disease Research and Treatment Center at the Medical Center, and a professor of medicine at UCLA.
Key contributors include first author Lan Zu, PhD, a fellow, and Karla Figueroa, a research associate, in the Rose Moss Laboratory for Parkinson's and Neurodegenerative Diseases of the Burns & Allen Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, and Raji Grewal, MD, a member of the Department of Neurology at the USC School of Medicine.
The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke, the Joseph Drown Foundation, and the Carmen and Louis Warschaw Endowment for Neurology.
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