GAA Instability in Friedreich's Ataxia Shares a Common, DNA-Directed and Intraallelic Mechanism with Other Trinucleotide Diseases

1998 
Abstract We show that GAA instability in Friedreich's Ataxia is a DNA-directed mutation caused by improper DNA structure at the repeat region. Unlike CAG or CGG repeats, which form hairpins, GAA repeats form a YRY triple helix containing non–Watson-Crick pairs. As with hairpins, triplex mediates intergenerational instability in 96% of transmissions. In families with Friedreich's Ataxia, the only recessive trinucleotide disease, GAA instability is not a function of the number of long alleles, ruling out homologous recombination or gene conversion as a major mechanism. The similarity of mutation pattern among triple repeat–related diseases indicates that all trinucleotide instability occurs by a common, intraallelic mechanism that depends on DNA structure. Secondary structure mediates instability by creating strong polymerase pause sites at or within the repeats, facilitating slippage or sister chromatid exchange.
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