95 research outputs found

    A phenotype of atypical apraxia of speech in a family carrying SQSTM1 mutation.

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    SQSTM1 mutations, coding for the p62 protein, were identified as a monogenic cause of Paget disease of bone and of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. More recently, SQSTM1 mutations were identified in few families with frontotemporal dementia. We report a new family carrying SQSTM1 mutation and presenting with a clinical phenotype of speech apraxia or atypical behavioral disorders, associated with early visuo-contructional deficits. This study further supports the implication of SQSTM1 in frontotemporal dementia, and enlarges the phenotypic spectrum associated with SQSTM1 mutations

    Démences : où sont les corps de Lewy ?

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    La démence à corps de Lewy (DCL) est la deuxième cause de démence dégénérative du sujet âgé, dans les grandes séries autopsiques. Dans la réalité quotidienne des centres mémoire pourtant, la DCL représente une faible proportion des diagnostics cliniques, avec une forte disparité entre les centres. Plusieurs raisons peuvent rendre compte de la faible sensibilité du diagnostic de DCL : l’imprécision et la subjectivité des critères diagnostiques existants ; la place insuffisante donnée à certains signes non-moteurs (troubles du comportement en sommeil paradoxal, dysautonomie) ; enfin et surtout l’association quasi constante de la pathologie de Lewy à une pathologie de type Alzheimer, qui domine rapidement le phénotype clinique. À l’heure de l’essor des thérapies ciblées contre les agrégats protéiques, de nouvelles échelles cliniques permettant d’appréhender la coexistence de la pathologie de Lewy dans la maladie d’Alzheimer sont plus que jamais nécessaires

    Relations between C9orf72 expansion size in blood, age at onset, age at collection and transmission across generations in patients and presymptomatic carriers

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    A (GGGGCC) n repeat expansion in C9orf72 gene is the major cause of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The relations between the repeats size and the age at disease onset (AO) or the clinical phenotype (FTD vs. ALS) were investigated in 125 FTD, ALS, and presymptomatic carriers. Positive correlations were found between repeats number and the AO (p < 10 e−4 ) but our results suggested that the association was mainly driven by age at collection (p < 10 e−4 ). A weaker association was observed with clinical presentation (p = 0.02), which became nonsignificant after adjustment for the age at collection in each group. Importantly, repeats number variably expanded or contracted over time in carriers with multiple blood samples, as well as through generations in parent-offspring pairs, conversely to what occurs in several expansion diseases with anticipation at the molecular level. Finally, this study establishes that measure of repeats number in lymphocytes is not a reliable biomarker predictive of the AO or disease outcome in C9orf72 long expansion carriers

    Gene Expression Imputation Across Multiple Tissue Types Provides Insight Into the Genetic Architecture of Frontotemporal Dementia and Its Clinical Subtypes

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    Mendelian randomization implies no direct causal association between leukocyte telomere length and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    Gene-based association studies report genetic links for clinical subtypes of frontotemporal dementia

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    Mendelian randomization implies no direct causal association between leukocyte telomere length and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

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    Protein network analysis reveals selectively vulnerable regions and biological processes in FTD

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