Huntington's disease: CAG genetics expands neurobiology

JF Gusella, ME MacDonald - Current opinion in neurobiology, 1995 - Elsevier
JF Gusella, ME MacDonald
Current opinion in neurobiology, 1995Elsevier
Huntington's disease, with its progressive uncontrolled movements and characteristic
selective neuropathology, has represented a baffling enigma to geneticists and
neurobiologists alike. Discovery of the HD gene and its defect has demystified the genetic
aspects of the disorder, but has not yet explained its pathogenesis. Attempts to explore this
issue suggest that the defect acts as a gain of function, conferring a new deleterious property
on the huntingtin protein, and that the gene's normal function may be irrelevant to the …
Huntington's disease, with its progressive uncontrolled movements and characteristic selective neuropathology, has represented a baffling enigma to geneticists and neurobiologists alike. Discovery of the HD gene and its defect has demystified the genetic aspects of the disorder, but has not yet explained its pathogenesis. Attempts to explore this issue suggest that the defect acts as a gain of function, conferring a new deleterious property on the huntingtin protein, and that the gene's normal function may be irrelevant to the disease process.
Elsevier