Eleven autopsies of patients from the large founder-population with dominantly inherited spinocerebellar ataxia 2 (SCA2) in Holguín, Cuba, were analyzed by the same observers, including quantitative microscopic evaluation. As expected in this disease with highly unstable polyglutamine expansions, considerable variability was observed, which correlated to age at onset and to progression of clinical symptoms. The degeneration of the olivopontocerebellar regions as in classical olivopontocerebellar atrophy occurred early and severely in SCA2. The neuropathological progression soon included neuronal loss in the substantia nigra, striatum, pallidum and later even the neocortex, while the dentate nucleus was consistently spared. This widespread degeneration pattern goes clearly beyond purely cerebellar degenerations such as SCA5 and 6 and beyond spinocerebellar degenerations such as SCA1, 3, 7, also involves regions known to degenerate in Huntington's disease, and is quite similar to the degeneration pattern in sporadic patients with multi-system atrophy.
The autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias (ADCA) are a group of neurodegenerative disorders characterized by onset with gait ataxia, dysarthria, dysmetria and dysdiadochokinesia. We have demonstrated previously genetic heterogeneity within these disorders by excluding the disease locus from the documented spinocerebellar ataxia locus (SCA1) on chromosome 6p in a large Cuban founder population. We now report the assignment of a second locus for ADCA (SCA2) to chromosome 12q23-24.1 following linkage analyses carried out for the Cuban pedigrees, with probable flanking markers D12S58 and phospholipase A2. Investigation of linkage to the interval containing SCA2 for seven French ADCA families, previously excluded from linkage to SCA1, provides preliminary data suggesting the existence of a third ADCA locus (SCA3).
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