Abstract
The most frequent form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT1A; OMIM118.220) is the result of a duplication on chromosome 17 in pll.2-p12. This region contains PMP22, a gene expressed in peripheral myelin. The mutation results from an unequal crossing-over involving repeated sequences, CMT1A-REP, located on both sides of the duplicated region. The reciprocal product of this recombination is a deletion of the same region, which is associated with hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP; OMIM162.500). Proximal and distal CMT1A-REP sequences can be distinguished by the presence of a variant EcoRI site. We quantified the number of these repeat sequences in 36 CMT1A and 40 HNPP patients. CMT1A-REP sequences are involved in almost all of the mutations. The majority of recombination breakpoints occur distally from the variant EcoRI site. However, a few have a breakpoint proximal to this site, which creates the risk of misinterpretation with respect to a duplicated/deleted status.
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