Importance: We report the first case to date of maternally transmitted infantile spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7), in which a tract of (CAG)45 expands to lengths as large as (CAG)92-250.
Observations: A 38-year-old woman with classic SCA7 (and a son, who died at age 3 years) had pronounced cerebellar atrophy and a renal biopsy specimen that showed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis with abnormal podocytes containing cytoplasmic inclusions. Polymerase chain reaction amplification across the SCA7 repeat tract assessed expansion levels in tissues of the affected son. High levels of somatic CAG instability were observed in blood, kidney, and skeletal muscle. This transmitted expansion is considerably larger than previously reported maternal transmission expansions of 5 to 10 gained repeats.
Conclusions and relevance: We document the first intertissue CAG instability reported to date in patients with SCA7, similar to SCA7 mouse models. Infantile SCA7, which is often paternally transmitted, can rarely arise by maternal transmission, which has implications for diagnosis and counseling among families of patients with SCA7.