Summary:
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recesive hereditary disease caused by premature
atrophy of motor neurons of the anterior spinal horns. With regard to the severity of the disease three
types of SMAare described:SMAI, II, III.SMAis caused by mutations by the gene Survival MotorNeuron
I (SMNI). Gene SMNI is on chromosome 5q13, which contains many repetitive sequences and pseudogenes.
Among the pseudogenes is also gene SMN2 which differs from gene SMN1 only in 6 nucleotides.
The product of gene SMN1, and to a smaller extent SMN2, is protein SMN which participates in the
posttranscription metabolism of mRNA of all cell types and in a not too well known way also in the
metabolism of the alpha-motor neurons of the anterior spinal horns. Protein SMN has several splicing
isoforms. 90% of all transcripts of the SMN1 gene is complete and fully functional. They have all 7 exons.
An opposite situation is found in transcription of gene SMN2 where only 10–30% transcripts are fully
functional, it contains all 7 exons. The severity of the disease depends on the presence of the amount
of functional molecules of protein SMN. The most frequent mutation are deletions comprising in 93%
patients exon 7 and 8 of gene SMN1. In 3–6% patients an isolated deletion of exon 7 is involved. Less
frequent are point mutations (1–2 patients with SM I, 4–5% patients with SMA II and III); so far some
20 patients were identified and 20 different point mutations. Another mechanism of development of
mutations in gene SMN1 is gene conversion of gene SMN1 to gene SMN2. This mechanism explains also
the increase of the number of copies of SMN2.
Key words:
ethiopathogenesis, spinal muscular atrophy
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