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Screening for Fragile X Syndrome

Fragile X Syndrome is an inherited condition which presents with mental retardation, delayed milestones, high forehead, large testicles, facial asymmetry, large jaw, long ears and short temper. The diagnosis is usually made before the child is one year old. 1,2
Fragile X syndrome is what is known as a repeat expansion disorder. In DNA coding it is common to see repeated sequences of the nucleotides that make up the genetic strand. In Fragile X Syndrome there is an expansion of the number of repeat sequences in the Fragile X mental retardation (FMR1) gene. The nucleotides involved are cytosine (C) and guanine (G) and the repeated sequence is CGG. In the commonest form of the condition, the CGG sequence is repeated more than 200 times. The metabolic result of this is to block production of a substance called fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP). 3

Family studies have identified both a full mutation and a "premutation" (less than 50 CGG repeats per segment) which is unstable and can become a full mutation on female transmission (but not on male transmission of the X chromosome to their daughters). This happens more frequently the larger the mutation, and the mutation may become larger in subsequent generations until the gene expression is blocked. About a third of female carriers of the full mutation have mild mental retardation.

For further details concerning epidemiology, presentation, diagnosis and management see Fragile X Syndrome.

The UK National Screening Program Committee decided not to institute a national newborn screening programme in 2003, and did not change their position when the subject was revisited in 2006.4
However, a workshop is planned to reconsider the position. Currently, the policy is to restrict screening to carrier identification within affected families. It may also be worthwhile screening mentally retarded children aiming to identify more families and enable carriers to have prenatal counselling. Screening thus has the potential for reducing the numbers born with the condition (primary prevention). Parents who are carriers may choose not to have children, use donor eggs, or use prenatal diagnosis to terminate affected pregnancies.

Methods Available

A blood sample (or chorionic villus biopsy) can be sent for DNA analysis. Most laboratories currently use a combination of Southern blotting (detects full mutations) and polymer chain reaction (PCR) tests (identifies pre-mutations and smaller CGG repeats). Southern blotting (named after Edward Southern, who developed the technique at Edinburgh University in the 1970s) involves transferring DNA material from an agar gel onto a membrane. Electrophoresis applied to this membrane can then be used to identify a particular DNA sequence.5 PCR used as polymerase enzyme to amplify a particular DNA region, making identification easier.6

FMRP antibody testing is available on a blood smear (this can detect affected males)7 and has also been developed on a pulled hair sample (this can detect males and females with a full mutation).8


Document References
  1. OMIM; Fragile Site Mental Retardation Gene1 2006
  2. Song F, Barton P, Sleightholme V et al; Screening for fragile X syndrome: a literature review and modelling study; Health Technol Assess 2003; 7(16).
  3. The National Fragile X Foundation; What Are Repeat Disorders? 2006
  4. National Screening Committee; Fragile X Screening 2006
  5. Wolf J; Southern Blotting University of Maryland Biological Sciences 2006
  6. Mullis KB; Target amplification for DNA analysis by the polymerase chain reaction. Ann Biol Clin (Paris). 1990;48(8):579-82. [abstract]
  7. Willemsen R, Smits A, Mohkamsing S, et al; Rapid antibody test for diagnosing fragile X syndrome: a validation of the technique. Hum Genet. 1997 Mar;99(3):308-11. [abstract]
  8. Willemsen R, Anar B, De Diego Otero Y, et al; Noninvasive test for fragile X syndrome, using hair root analysis. Am J Hum Genet. 1999 Jul;65(1):98-103. [abstract]

Internet and Further Reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Laurence Knott for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 2759
Document Version: 21
DocRef: bgp24830
Last Updated: 4 Dec 2006
Review Date: 3 Dec 2008






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PS - Health and Poverty

Perhaps the biggest cause of ill health in the world is poverty. Help to Make Poverty History. For example, why not lend some of your money to disadvantaged communities to enable them to trade their way out of poverty through schemes such as Shared Interest.

See also MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY North East for details and links to campaigns against poverty.

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