One family with documented male-to-male transmission of Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) neuropathy was studied clinically and by genetic linkage. Patients had progressive distal weakness and atrophy, areflexia, and distal sensory loss, but early onset (before age 3 years) in all 5 cases, and phrenic nerve involvement in the propositus (a 39-year-old woman) requiring CPAP ventilator support during the night. Motor-nerve conduction velocities (MNCVs) were significantly slow, consistent with severe demyelinating neuropathy. Electromyography (EMG) data were normal. Two-point and multipoint linkage analyses strongly suggested the presence of a CMT gene on chromosome 1q. A maximum multipoint lod score of 2.70 was obtained at MUC1 (theta = 0), with the locus order centromere-MUC1-SPTA1-Fc gamma RII-AT3-telomere. Multipoint linkage analysis excluded the CMT locus from chromosome 17 markers in this family.