Linkage analysis in a family with dominantly inherited torsion dystonia: exclusion of the pro-opiomelanocortin and glutamic acid decarboxylase genes and other chromosomal regions using DNA polymorphisms.
Here we evaluate the inheritance of restriction fragment length polymorphisms near the DBH gene in families with four subtypes of hereditary dystonia: Jewish and non-Jewish, early onset, generalized idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD); dopa-responsive dystonia; and myoclonic dystonia.
Here we evaluate the inheritance of restriction fragment length polymorphisms near the DBH gene in families with four subtypes of hereditary dystonia: Jewish and non-Jewish, early onset, generalized idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD); dopa-responsive dystonia; and myoclonic dystonia.
The DYT1 gene responsible for early-onset, idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD) in the Ashkenazi Jewish population, as well as in one large non-Jewish family, has been mapped to chromosome 9q32-34.
The DYT1 gene responsible for early-onset, generalized idiopathic torsion dystonia in Jewish and some non-Jewish families has been mapped to chromosome 9q34.
However, it is noteworthy that the gene for torsion dystonia has also been localized by genetic studies to 9q34.3, the same regional map location as NMDAR1.
A tremor indistinguishable from ET may be observed in patients with autosomal dominant idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD), in which the disease locus has been mapped to 9q32-34 in some kindreds, tightly linked to the argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) locus.