The D178N (cis-129M) "fatal familial insomnia" mutation associated with diverse clinicopathologic phenotypes in an Australian kindred
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Abstract
Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) is an inherited prion disease characterized by progressive insomnia and dysautonomia with only modest cognitive impairment early in the disease, associated with atrophy and gliosis in the medial thalamus, but without spongiform change. FFI is associated with an aspartic acid to asparagine mutation at codon 178 of the PrP gene (D178N) in conjunction with methionine at the codon 129 polymorphic site on the mutant allele (cis-129M). We report a pedigree with this genotype in which marked clinicopathologic phenotypic heterogeneity occurred including typical Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, FFI, and what was thought to be an autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA)-like illness, suggesting that the genotype-phenotype correlation is not as tight for this mutation as is frequently supposed.
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DISCORDANT CLINICOPATHOLOGIC PHENOTYPES IN A JAPANESE KINDRED OF FATAL FAMILIAL INSOMNIAY. Saitoh, M. Ogawa, Y. Naito et al.Neurology, December 28, 2009