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Jennifer Gass, Ashley Cannon, Ian R. Mackenzie, Bradley Boeve, Matt Baker, Jennifer Adamson, Richard Crook, Stacey Melquist, Karen Kuntz, Ron Petersen, Keith Josephs, Stuart M. Pickering-Brown, Neill Graff-Radford, Ryan Uitti, Dennis Dickson, Zbigniew Wszolek, John Gonzalez, Thomas G. Beach, Eileen Bigio, Nancy Johnson, Sandra Weintraub, Marsel Mesulam, Charles L. White, Bryan Woodruff, Richard Caselli, Ging-Yuek Hsiung, Howard Feldman, Dave Knopman, Mike Hutton, Rosa Rademakers, Mutations in progranulin are a major cause of ubiquitin-positive frontotemporal lobar degeneration , Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 15, Issue 20, 15 October 2006, Pages 2988–3001, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddl241
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Abstract
Null mutations in the progranulin gene ( PGRN ) were recently reported to cause tau-negative frontotemporal dementia linked to chromosome 17. We assessed the genetic contribution of PGRN mutations in an extended population of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) ( N =378). Mutations were identified in 10% of the total FTLD population and 23% of patients with a positive family history. This mutation frequency dropped to 5% when analysis was restricted to an unbiased FTLD subpopulation ( N =167) derived from patients referred to Alzheimer's Disease Research Centers (ADRC). Among the ADRC patients, PGRN mutations were equally frequent as mutations in the tau gene ( MAPT ). We identified 23 different pathogenic PGRN mutations, including a total of 21 nonsense, frameshift and splice-site mutations that cause premature termination of the coding sequence and degradation of the mutant RNA by nonsense-mediated decay. We also observed an unusual splice-site mutation in the exon 1 5′ splice site, which leads to loss of the Kozac sequence, and a missense mutation in the hydrophobic core of the PGRN signal peptide. Both mutations revealed novel mechanisms that result in loss of functional PGRN. One mutation, c.1477C>T (p.Arg493X), was detected in eight independently ascertained familial FTLD patients who were shown to share a common extended haplotype over the PGRN genomic region. Clinical examination of patients with PGRN mutations revealed highly variable onset ages with language dysfunction as a common presenting symptom. Neuropathological examination showed FTLD with ubiquitin-positive cytoplasmic and intranuclear inclusions in all PGRN mutation carriers.