Abstract

ObjectiveTo study genetic causes of the low frequency of Huntington disease (HD) in the Finnish population, we determined HTT haplogroups in the population and patients with HD and analyzed intergenerational Cytosine-Adenosine-Guanosine (CAG) stability.MethodsA national cohort of patients with HD was used to identify families with mutant HTT (mHTT). HTT haplogroups were determined in 225 archival samples from patients and from 292 population samples. CAG repeats were phased with HTT haplotypes using data from parent-offspring pairs and other mHTT carriers in the family.ResultsThe allele frequencies of HTT haplotypes in the Finnish population differed from those in 411 non-Finnish European subjects (p < 0.00001). The frequency of haplogroup A was lower than that in Europeans and haplogroup C was higher. Haplogroup A alleles were significantly more common in patients than in controls. Among patients with HD haplotypes A1 and A2 were more frequent than among the controls (p = 0.003). The mean size of the CAG repeat change was +1.38 units in paternal transmissions being larger than that (−0.17) in maternal transmissions (p = 0.008). CAG repeats on haplogroup A increased by 3.18 CAG units in paternal transmissions, but only by 0.11 units in maternal transmissions (p = 0.008), whereas haplogroup C repeat lengths decreased in both paternal and maternal transmissions.ConclusionsThe low frequency of HD in Finland is partly explained by the low frequency of the HD-associated haplogroup A in the Finnish population. There were remarkable differences in intergenerational CAG repeat dynamics that depended on HTT haplotype and parent gender.

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