A GENETIC MODEL FOR AGE AT ONSET IN HUNTINGTON DISEASE

  • 1 January 1985
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 37 (2), 350-357
Abstract
Although numerous investigators confirmed excess paternal transmission among juvenile-onset cases of Huntington disease (HD), there are conflicting reports that the late-onset form is inherited more often from the mother than from the father. Results from a survey of age at onset and age at death in 569 patients corroborate earlier findings of delayed onset of HD among offspring of affected mothers at both ends of the onset-age spectrum: 23 of 48 juvenile-onset offspring had affected fathers, and there were 1.6 .times. more late-onset offspring born to affected mothers than to affected fathers. These patterns, together with data that link age-at-onset variability to familial longevity trends, suggest a model where age at onset is governed, generally by a set of independently inherited aging genes, but expression of the HD gene may be significantly delayed in individuals who possess a particular maternally transmitted factor.