HD is found in every country of the world. It is a familial disease, passed from parent to child through
a mutation or misspelling in the normal gene.
A single abnormal gene, the basic biological unit of heredity, produces HD. Genes are composed of deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA), a molecule shaped like a spiral ladder. Each rung of this ladder is composed of two paired chemicals called
bases.
There are four types of bases--adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine--each abbreviated by the first
letter of its name: A, T, C, and G. Certain bases always "pair" together, and different combinations of base pairs join to
form coded messages. A gene is a long string of this DNA that is composed of various combinations of A, T, C, and G. These
unique combinations determine the gene's function, much like letters join together to form words.
Each person has about 100,000 genes--three billion base pairs of DNA or bits of information repeated
in the nuclei of human cells--which determine individual characteristics or traits.
Genes are arranged in precise locations along 23 rod-like pairs of chromosomes. One chromosome
from each pair comes from an individual's mother, the other from the father. Each half of a chromosome pair is similar to
the other, except for one pair, which determines the sex of the individual. This pair has two x chromosomes in females and
one x and one y chromosome in males.
The gene that produces HD lies on chromosome 4, one of the 22 non-sex-linked, or "autosomal," pairs
of chromosomes, placing men and women at equal risk of acquiring the disease.