Interactive Genomic Exploration · CGG Expansion

The Genetics of Fragile X

A single gene on the X chromosome that switches "off" when a repeat grows too long. An interactive journey through FMR1, the FMRP protein and its close connection with autism.

Discover
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Causative gene (FMR1)
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CGG repeats (full mutation)
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Approximate prevalence in males
X
Chromosome where FMR1 resides
The story at a glance

From a gene that switches off to the symptoms

The whole journey of this page, summarized in steps.

Starting point
DNA
X chromosome
FMR1 gene
The triplet
CGG expansion (>200)
Chemical mark
Methylation
Silenced gene
No FMRP protein
Brain
Altered synapses
Outcome
Intellectual disability and autism
The disease

What is fragile X syndrome?

Before diving into the genetics, it helps to know the condition that the FMR1 gene explains.

Fragile X syndrome is the most common inherited cause of intellectual disability and the most common monogenic cause of autism. It arises when the FMR1 gene, on the X chromosome, switches "off" and stops making the FMRP protein, which is needed for synapses to work well. It is not degenerative: it is a neurodevelopmental disorder.

≈ 1/4000 ♂
Prevalence of the full mutation (~1/8000 in females)
> 200 CGG
Repeats that silence the FMR1 gene
~Top cause
Most common monogenic cause of autism (2–6% of cases)
X-linked
Affects males more; females are usually less affected
Origin

From "Martin-Bell syndrome" to the gene

In 1943, Martin and Bell described an X-linked intellectual disability. In 1969, Lubs observed a "fragile site" —a constriction— on that chromosome. The cause was revealed in 1991: the expansion of the CGG triplet in the FMR1 gene, the starting point for the rest of this page.

Symptoms

More than learning

The lack of FMRP affects several domains, which combine and vary widely from one person to another:

Cognitive

Learning

Mild to moderate intellectual disability (more pronounced in males), language delay, and difficulties with attention and executive function.

Behavior

Autism and anxiety

Autism spectrum traits (around half of males), social anxiety, gaze avoidance, hyperactivity, sensory hypersensitivity, and hand-flapping or hand-biting.

Physical

Subtle features

Long face, large ears, hyperflexible joints and, after puberty in males, macroorchidism (large testes). These tend to become more pronounced with age.

Profiles

It doesn't affect everyone equally

Most affected

Males with the full mutation

With a single X, they have no healthy copy to compensate: they show the fullest picture of intellectual disability and autistic traits.

Highly variable

Females with the full mutation

Their second, healthy X partly compensates (through random X-inactivation): ranging from almost no symptoms to mild or moderate learning difficulties.

Premutation (55–200)

Carriers

They do not have fragile X, but with age they can develop FXTAS (tremor and ataxia, mainly in older males) or FXPOI (ovarian insufficiency in females).

Across the lifespan

A neurodevelopmental condition, not degenerative

Unlike Huntington's, the symptoms appear in childhood and then remain relatively stable; there is no progressive deterioration of the brain.

Early infancy

Developmental and language delay, sometimes hypotonia. Physical features are still subtle.

Childhood

Learning and behavioral difficulties; this is usually when it is diagnosed. Educational support is key.

Adolescence

More pronounced physical features (face, ears, macroorchidism). The condition is stable and does not worsen.

Adulthood

A stable picture. Attention to premutation carriers, who may develop FXTAS or FXPOI.

Treatment

No cure, but early intervention makes a big difference

There is no treatment that repairs the cause, but an early, multidisciplinary approach markedly improves development and independence.

Development

Early intervention

Speech therapy, occupational therapy, special education and behavioral support from an early age: the cornerstone of treatment.

Associated symptoms

Pharmacological support

Stimulants for hyperactivity, SSRIs for anxiety and, in specific cases, antipsychotics for severe behaviors. Always as support, not as a cure.

Family

Genetic counseling

Key for the family: it identifies premutation carriers and provides guidance on the risk of transmission and reproductive options.

Science-based educational content (Martin-Bell syndrome, 1943; FMR1 gene, Verkerk et al. 1991; current clinical practice). It is not a substitute for assessment by a healthcare professional.

Foundation

The CGG triplet

The FMR1 gene, on the X chromosome, contains near its start a stretch in which the CGG triplet is repeated. This gene makes the FMRP protein, essential for regulating protein production at synapses.

In most people there are fewer than 45 repeats. When the stretch expands above 200, the gene is chemically "marked" (methylation), is silenced and stops producing FMRP: this is how fragile X syndrome arises.

CGGCGGCGGCGGCGGCGG··· × N repeats
Location
Xq27.3
Protein
FMRP
Critical region
5′-UTR · CGG
Where does the gene live?

FMR1, on the long arm of the X chromosome

The FMR1 gene is on the X chromosome, in band Xq27.3 —right at the "fragile site" that gives the syndrome its name—. Because it lies on the X, its inheritance differs from that of other genes.

The dot marks Xq27.3, the band where FMR1 sits, on the long arm (q) of the X chromosome.
From gene to silence

How a repeat switches the gene off

Unlike Huntington's (which makes a toxic protein), here the problem is the opposite: the repeat grows so much that it silences the gene and the neuron is left without FMRP.

FMR1 gene
Methylation
FMRP protein
Synapse

Interactive

The repeat that switches the gene off

The number of CGG repeats determines whether FMR1 works, produces toxic RNA, or is silenced entirely. Click each range to see what it means.

30CGG repeats
Normal

In context

Fragile X is not alone

It shares its mechanism with other repeat expansion diseases. Click a row to see why the same idea produces such different diseases.

DiseaseGeneRepeatThresholdInheritance
Fragile X view →FMR1CGG≥ 200X-linked
Huntington'sHTTCAG≥ 36–40Autosomal dominant
Myotonic dystrophy type 1DMPKCTG≥ 50Autosomal dominant
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 1ATXN1CAG≥ 39Autosomal dominant
Friedreich's ataxiaFXNGAA≥ ~70Autosomal recessive

Fragile X is special: the repeat does not create a toxic protein, but instead switches off the gene. Huntington's has its own atlas in this collection.

FMR1 and its environment

Genes and targets

FMR1 does not act alone: its FMRP protein controls the translation of hundreds of RNAs, many of them autism genes. Click a card to see the details.

Functional convergence

Gene network

FMR1/FMRP at the center and, around it, its partners, its signaling pathway and its targets. Hover over a node to identify it; click to see the details.

Eight decades of science

Timeline of discoveries

From Martin-Bell syndrome to the FMR1 gene and the therapies that aim to reactivate it.

Biology

Mechanisms of the disease

How the loss of FMRP alters the synapse and connects fragile X with autism.

Interactive · why does FMRP matter?

The missing brake at the synapse

FMRP brakes protein production at dendritic spines. Without it, the spines remain immature and too numerous. Compare the two states.

X-linked inheritance

How is it inherited?

The FMR1 gene is on the X chromosome. That is why males (with a single X) are usually more affected, whereas females (with two X chromosomes) are carriers or have milder, more variable symptoms.

0%
Probability that a carrier transmits the expanded allele
0%
Penetrance in males with the full mutation

The premutation (55–200 CGG) can expand to a full mutation when transmitted —only through the maternal line—, so the disease can appear "anew" in the children of a carrier (anticipation). Premutation carriers themselves may develop FXTAS (tremor/ataxia) or FXPOI (ovarian insufficiency).

Interactive · anticipation

The jump from premutation to full mutation

Adjust the size of the mother's premutation and you'll see the risk that it expands to a full mutation in the son or daughter who inherits that X chromosome. (It only expands through the maternal line.)

70 CGG in the mother (premutation)
30 %
Risk of expansion to a full mutation in the offspring

Indicative figures (based on Nolin et al.): the risk grows with the size of the premutation; AGG interruptions reduce it. This is not an individual prediction.

X-linked inheritance

From a carrier mother

Carrier mother × non-carrier father — click each member
Male Female Filled = affected Dashed border = carrier
Conclusions

What do we know for certain?

The essentials about the genetics of fragile X syndrome:

The key point: fragile X has a very well-defined molecular cause, which makes it a model for understanding autism and intellectual disability. Therapies are being investigated to reactivate FMR1 and correct synaptic signaling.

Therapeutic pathways: where does each one stand?
Already in clinical use

Support for development and symptoms

  • Early intervention: speech therapy, occupational therapy, special education
  • SSRIs for anxiety and stimulants for hyperactivity
  • Antipsychotics for severe behaviors. They do not repair the cause
In clinical trials

Rebalancing the synapse

  • mGluR5 modulators (mavoglurant, basimglurant): complex results
  • Transdermal cannabidiol (ZYN002) and metformin under study
  • GABA-B agonists (arbaclofen) for hyperexcitability
Preclinical research

Reactivating the gene

  • Epigenetic editing (CRISPR/dCas9) to demethylate and reactivate FMR1
  • Gene therapy to restore FMRP
  • Antisense oligonucleotides against the toxic RNA of the premutation
Myths

What does NOT cause fragile X

It is a purely genetic condition. It is not caused by parenting or the environment:

Parenting style Vaccines Diet Screens Something the parents did

Early intervention greatly improves development, but the cause is always the same: the CGG expansion that silences the FMR1 gene, inherited through the maternal line.

The frontier

The latest and what's coming

Because of its very well-defined cause, fragile X is one of the leading models for investigating neurodevelopment.

Recent advances

Discoveries that are changing the field

Reactivating the gene

Demethylation with CRISPR

In 2018, FMR1 was reactivated in cultured human neurons by removing the methylation with CRISPR/dCas9, restoring some FMRP. A proof of concept that the "switched-off" gene can be turned back on.

Predicting the risk

AGG interruptions

Small AGG interruptions within the CGG repeat stabilize the allele and reduce the risk that the premutation will expand. Today they are measured to fine-tune genetic counseling.

Measuring better

Objective biomarkers

EEG, eye tracking and evoked potentials make it possible to measure brain function objectively, key for trials to detect whether a drug works.

Future directions

Where the research is heading

Early window

Treating early

The developing brain is more plastic: intervening in the first years could be decisive for therapies aimed at the cause.

Restoring FMRP

Gene therapy

Delivering a functional copy of FMR1 (with AAV vectors) or reactivating the patient's own gene in vivo, the major goals for restoring the FMRP protein.

Premutation

Curbing the toxic RNA

Antisense oligonucleotides to neutralize the toxic RNA of the premutation, which causes FXTAS in older carriers.

Research is advancing rapidly and some of these results are preliminary: the dates and specific data may change as the trials mature.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions

The questions that come up most when learning about fragile X syndrome.

Is fragile X the same as autism?
No, but they are closely related. Fragile X is a specific genetic cause; autism is a set of behavioral traits. Around half of males with fragile X meet the criteria for autism, and fragile X is the most common monogenic cause of ASD.
Can a girl have fragile X?
Yes. Females have two X chromosomes: if one carries the full mutation, the other (healthy) one partly compensates through random X-inactivation. That is why they are usually less affected and in a very variable way, from almost no symptoms to mild or moderate difficulties.
What does it mean to be a "premutation carrier"?
Having between 55 and 200 CGG repeats. It does not cause fragile X syndrome, but the allele is unstable and, in women, it can expand to a full mutation when transmitted. In addition, carriers can develop FXTAS (tremor/ataxia) or FXPOI (ovarian insufficiency) with age.
Is it inherited from the father or the mother?
The gene can come from either parent, but the expansion to a full mutation only occurs through the maternal line. A father with a premutation transmits it stably to all his daughters (never to his sons, who receive his Y), without it turning into a full mutation.
Can it be detected before symptoms or before birth?
Yes. A simple genetic test measures the CGG repeats and the methylation status. Prenatal diagnosis is available and, for carrier families, options such as preimplantation genetic diagnosis. Always with genetic counseling.
Is there a cure?
Not for now, but early intervention greatly improves development and independence. Therapies are being investigated to reactivate the FMR1 gene and rebalance the synapse.
Sources and glossary

Where this comes from

Milestones and scientific sources on which this page is based.

Foundational milestones
1943Martin JP, Bell J. A pedigree of mental defect showing sex-linkage. J Neurol Psychiatry. The original description (Martin-Bell syndrome).
1969Lubs HA. A marker X chromosome. Am J Hum Genet. The "fragile site".
1991Verkerk AJMH et al. Identification of a gene (FMR-1) containing a CGG repeat coincident with a fragile X breakpoint. Cell. The FMR1 gene and the CGG expansion.
Mechanism and therapy
2004Bear MF, Huber KM, Warren ST. The mGluR theory of fragile X mental retardation. Trends in Neurosciences. The main therapeutic target.
2011Darnell JC et al. FMRP stalls ribosomal translocation on mRNAs linked to synaptic function and autism. Cell. The targets of FMRP, many of them autism genes.
2017Hagerman RJ et al. Fragile X syndrome. Nature Reviews Disease Primers. Landmark review.
2018Liu XS et al. Rescue of fragile X syndrome neurons by DNA methylation editing of the FMR1 gene. Cell. Reactivation of the gene with CRISPR.
Databases and support
DatabasesOMIM #300624, ClinGen and organizations such as the National Fragile X Foundation.

A synthesized educational page; it is not a primary clinical source. For medical decisions, consult professionals and the official resources of fragile X organizations.

Glossary

Key terms

PremutationBetween 55 and 200 CGG repeats; it does not cause the syndrome but is unstable.
The gene remains active, but produces excess RNA that can be toxic (FXTAS, FXPOI). Most importantly: through the maternal line it can expand to a full mutation in the offspring.
Full mutationMore than 200 CGG repeats; it silences the FMR1 gene.
The excess CGG causes the gene to become methylated and switch off. Without the FMRP protein, fragile X syndrome appears with intellectual disability and, often, autistic traits.
MethylationA chemical mark that "switches off" a gene without changing its sequence.
It is an epigenetic mark: it adds methyl groups to the DNA that prevent it from being read. In fragile X, the full mutation is methylated and silences FMR1. Removing that mark is a therapeutic avenue under study.
FMRPThe protein made by FMR1; it regulates translation at the synapse.
FMRP brakes the production of hundreds of proteins at dendritic spines. Without it, they are overproduced and the synapses remain immature. Many of its targets are autism genes.
X-linkedThe gene is on the X chromosome, which changes the inheritance pattern.
Males (a single X) have no backup copy: they are usually more affected. Females (two X chromosomes) have a healthy copy that partly compensates, with milder, more variable symptoms.
X-inactivationIn females, one of the two X chromosomes is "switched off" at random in each cell.
That is why a woman with a full mutation is a mosaic: in some cells the healthy X is in charge and in others the mutated one. The proportion explains why symptoms vary so much among women.
AnticipationThe repeat tends to grow across generations.
In fragile X it occurs only through the maternal line: a premutation can jump to a full mutation in the children, so the disease can appear "anew" in a family of carriers.
mGluR5A glutamate receptor whose signal is exaggerated without FMRP.
According to the "mGluR theory", FMRP normally balances the mGluR5 signal; without it, synaptic protein synthesis runs out of control. That is why mGluR5 antagonists were tested as a treatment.
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