Journal article
Trinucleotide-repeat expansions and neurodegenerative disease: A mechanism of pathogenesis
AJ Hannan
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | WILEY | Published : 1996
Abstract
1. Studies of a number of hereditary neurodegenerative diseases, the most common of which is Huntington's disease, have identified the expansion of trinucleotide repeats as a common causative mutation. 2. The diseases are caused by expansions of CAG repeats, encoding polyglutamine tracts, within the coding regions of a variety of unrelated genes. The mechanism whereby this specific genetic instability leads to selective neurodegeneration is currently unknown. 3. Our current understanding of these polyglutamine expansion neurodegenerative diseases is outlined. A potential mechanism is discussed whereby subtle alterations in glutamine, and consequently glutamate levels, may induce chronic exci..
View full abstract