Abstract
A homozygous pentanucleotide expansion in the RFC1 gene has been shown to be a common cause of late-onset ataxia. In the general population a total of four different repeat conformations have been observed: a wild type sequence AAAAG (11 repeats), and longer expansions of AAAAG, AAAGG and AAGGG sequences. However, in ataxia cases only the AAGGG expansion has been shown to be pathogenic. In this study, we assessed the prevalence and nature of RFC1 repeat expansions in three adult-onset ataxia cohorts: Brazilian (n = 23) and Canadian (n = 26) cases that tested negative for other known ataxia mutations, as well as a cohort of randomly selected Canadian cases (n = 128) without regard to a genetic diagnosis. We identified the homozygous AAGGG pathogenic expansion in only one Brazilian family with two affected siblings, and in one Canadian case. The RFC1 expansion may therefore not be a common cause of adult-onset ataxia in these populations. Interestingly we observed two new repeat motifs, AAGAG and AGAGG, which indicates the dynamic nature of the pentanucleotide expansion sequence. To assess the frequency of these two new repeat conformations in the general population we screened 163 healthy individuals. These novel motifs were more frequent in patients versus controls. While we cannot be certain that the homozygous genotypes of the novel expanded conformations are pathogenic, their occurrence should nonetheless be taken into consideration in future studies.