首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Myotonia congenita belongs to the group of non-dystrophic myotonia caused by mutations of CLCN1gene, which encodes human skeletal muscle chloride channel 1. It can be inherited either in autosomal dominant (Thomsen disease) or recessive (Becker disease) forms. Here we have sequenced all 23 exons and exon-intron boundaries of the CLCN1 gene, in a panel of 5 unrelated Chinese patients with myotonia congenita (2 with dominant and 3 with recessive form). In addition, detailed clinical analysis was performed in these patients to summarize their clinical characteristics in relation to their genotypes. Mutational analyses revealed 7 different point mutations. Of these, we have found 3 novel mutations including 2 missense (R47W, V229M), one splicing (IVS19+2T>C), and 4 known mutations (Y261C,G523D, M560T, G859D). Our data expand the spectrum of CLCN1 mutations and provide insights for genotype–phenotype correlations of myotonia congenita in the Chinese population.  相似文献   

2.
Myotonia congenita belongs to the group of non-dystrophic myotonia caused by mutations of CLCN1gene, which encodes human skeletal muscle chloride channel 1. It can be inherited either in autosomal dominant (Thomsen disease) or recessive (Becker disease) forms. Here we have sequenced all 23 exons and exon-intron boundaries of the CLCN1 gene, in a panel of 5 unrelated Chinese patients with myotonia congenita (2 with dominant and 3 with recessive form). In addition, detailed clinical analysis was performed in these patients to summarize their clinical characteristics in relation to their genotypes. Mutational analyses revealed 7 different point mutations. Of these, we have found 3 novel mutations including 2 missense (R47W, V229M), one splicing (IVS19+2T>C), and 4 known mutations (Y261C,G523D, M560T, G859D). Our data expand the spectrum of CLCN1 mutations and provide insights for genotype–phenotype correlations of myotonia congenita in the Chinese population.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Myotonia congenita is a human muscle disorder caused by mutations in CLCN1, which encodes human chloride channel 1 (CLCN1). Zebrafish is becoming an increasingly useful model for human diseases, including muscle disorders. In this study, we generated transgenic zebrafish expressing, under the control of a muscle specific promoter, human CLCN1 carrying mutations that have been identified in human patients suffering from myotonia congenita. We developed video analytic tools that are able to provide precise quantitative measurements of movement abnormalities in order to analyse the effect of these CLCN1 mutations on adult transgenic zebrafish swimming. Two new parameters for body-wave kinematics of swimming reveal changes in body curvature and tail offset in transgenic zebrafish expressing the disease-associated CLCN1 mutants, presumably due to their effect on muscle function. The capability of the developed video analytic tool to distinguish wild-type from transgenic zebrafish could provide a useful asset to screen for compounds that reverse the disease phenotype, and may be applicable to other movement disorders besides myotonia congenita.  相似文献   

5.
Myotonia congenita is a muscular disease characterized by myotonia, hypertrophy, and stiffness. It is inherited as either autosomal dominant or recessive known as Thomsen and Becker diseases, respectively. Here we confirm the clinical diagnosis of a family diagnosed with a myotonic condition many years ago and report a new mutation in the CLCN1 gene. The clinical diagnosis was established using ocular, cardiac, neurological and electrophysiological tests and the molecular diagnosis was done by PCR, SSCP and sequencing of the CLCN1 gene. The proband and the other affected individuals exhibited proximal and distal muscle weakness but no hypertrophy or muscular pain was found. The myotatic reflexes were lessened and sensibility was normal. Electrical and clinical myotonia was found only in the sufferers. Slit lamp and electrocardiogram tests were normal. Two affected probands presented diminution of the sensitive conduction velocities and prolonged sensory distal latencies. The clinical spectrum for this family is in agreement with a clinical diagnosis of Becker myotonia. This was confirmed by molecular diagnosis where a new disease-causing mutation (Q412P) was found in the family and absent in 200 unaffected chromosomes. No latent myotonia was found in this family; therefore the ability to cause this subclinical sign might be intrinsic to each mutation. Implications of the structure-function-genotype relationship for this and other mutations are discussed. Adequate clinical diagnosis of a neuromuscular disorder would allow focusing the molecular studies toward the confirmation of the initial diagnosis, leading to a proper clinical management, genetic counseling and improving in the quality of life of the patients and relatives.  相似文献   

6.
Myotonia congenita (MC) is a skeletal muscle channelopathy characterized by inability of the muscle to relax following voluntary contraction. Worldwide population prevalence in humans is 1∶100,000. Studies in mice, dogs, humans and goats confirmed myotonia associated with functional defects in chloride channels and mutations in a skeletal muscle chloride channel (CLCN1). CLCN1 encodes for the most abundant chloride channel in the skeletal muscle cell membrane. Five random bred cats from Winnipeg, Canada with MC were examined. All cats had a protruding tongue, limited range of jaw motion and drooling with prominent neck and proximal limb musculature. All cats had blepharospasm upon palpebral reflex testing and a short-strided gait. Electromyograms demonstrated myotonic discharges at a mean frequency of 300 Hz resembling the sound of a ‘swarm of bees’. Muscle histopathology showed hypertrophy of all fiber types. Direct sequencing of CLCN1 revealed a mutation disrupting a donor splice site downstream of exon 16 in only the affected cats. In vitro translation of the mutated protein predicted a premature truncation and partial lack of the highly conserved CBS1 (cystathionine β-synthase) domain critical for ion transport activity and one dimerization domain pivotal in channel formation. Genetic screening of the Winnipeg random bred population of the cats'' origin identified carriers of the mutation. A genetic test for population screening is now available and carrier cats from the feral population can be identified.  相似文献   

7.
Autosomal dominant myotonia congenita and autosomal recessive generalized myotonia (GM) are genetic disorders characterized by the symptom of myotonia, which is based on an electrical instability of the muscle fiber membrane. Recently, these two phenotypes have been associated with mutations in the major muscle chloride channel gene CLCN1 on human chromosome 7q35. We have systematically screened the open reading frame of the CLCN1 gene for mutations by SSC analysis (SSCA) in a panel of 24 families and 17 single unrelated patients with human myotonia. By direct sequencing of aberrant SSCA conformers were revealed 15 different mutations in a total of 18 unrelated families and 13 single patients. Of these, 10 were novel (7 missense mutations, 2 mutations leading to frameshift, and 1 mutation predicted to affect normal splicing). In our overall sample of 94 GM chromosomes we were able to detect 48 (51%) mutant GM alleles. Three mutations (F413C), R894X, and a 14-bp deletion in exon 13) account for 32% of the GM chromosomes in the German population. Our finding that A437T is probably a polymorphism is in contrast to a recent report that the recessive phenotype GM is associated with this amino acid change. We also demonstrate that the R894X mutation may act as a recessive or a dominant mutation in the CLCN1 gene, probably depending on the genetic background. Functional expression of the R894X mutant in Xenopus oocytes revealed a large reduction, but not complete abolition, of chloride currents. Further, it had a weak dominant negative effect on wild-type currents in coexpression studies. Reduction of currents predicted for heterozygous carriers are close to the borderline value, which is sufficient to elicit myotonia.  相似文献   

8.
Myotonia congenita (MC), paramyotonia congenita (PC) and sodium channel myotonias(SCM) were belonged to Non-dystrophic myotonias, in which muscle relaxation is delayed after voluntary or evoked contraction. These diseases can not be simply distinguished only based on symptoms and signs but also on genetics: more than 100 mutations in the CLCN1 gene have been associated with MC, while at least 20 mutations in the SCN4A gene have been associated with PC and SCM. Most of these genetics studies have been conducted outside China, only several MC, PC, and SCM families accepted gene scan were reported in China. Therefore we analyzed genetic mutations in CLCN1 and SCN4A in 10 Chinese families clinically diagnosed with Non-dystrophic myotonias. Our result revealed 12 potential disease-causing mutations(3 mutations were novel) that were present in the probands and affected family members. We also reviewed all available literature on mutations linked to these 3 disease in Chinese populations. Our results may help identify genetic determinants as well as clarify genotype-phenotype relationships.  相似文献   

9.
Mutations within CLCN1, the gene encoding the major skeletal muscle chloride channel, cause either dominant Thomsen disease or recessive Becker-type myotonia, which are sometimes difficult to discriminate, because of reduced penetrance or lower clinical expressivity in females. We screened DNA of six unrelated Becker patients and found four novel CLCN1 mutations (Gln-74-Stop, Tyr-150-Cys, Tyr-261-Cys, and Ala-415-Val) and a previously reported 14-bp deletion. Five patients were homozygous for the changes (Gln-74-Stop, Ala-415-Val, and 14-bp deletion), four of them due to parental consanguinity. The sixth patient revealed compound heterozygosity for Tyr-150-Cys and Tyr-261-Cys. Heterozygous carriers of the Becker mutations did not display any clinical symptoms of myotonia. However, all heterozygous males, but none of the heterozygous females, exhibited myotonic discharges in the electromyogram suggesting (i) a gene dosage effect of the mutations on the chloride conductance and (ii) male predominance of subclinical myotonia. Furthermore, we report a novel Gly-200-Arg mutation resulting in a dominant phenotype in a male and a partially dominant phenotype in his mother. We discuss potential causes of the gender preference and the molecular mechanisms that may determine the mode of inheritance.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Thomsen??s and Becker??s diseases are the most prevalent nondystrophic myotonias. Their frequency varies, according to different sources, from 1: 100000 to 1: 10000. Thomsen??s myotonia is autosomal dominant, and Becker??s myotonia is autosomal recessive. Both diseases result from mutations of the CLCN1 gene encoding chloride ion channels of skeletal muscles. Molecular genetic analysis of the CLCN1 gene has been performed in patients with diagnoses of nondystrophic Thomsen??s and Becker??s myotonias living in the Russian Federation. A sample of 79 unrelated probands with nondystrophic Thomsen??s and Becker??s myotonias and 44 their relatives has been formed in the Laboratory of DNA Diagnosis of the Medical Genetic Research Center of the Russian Academy of Medical Sciences. Forty CLCN1 gene mutations have been found in a total of 118 chromosomes of 66 probands, including 21 familial and 45 sporadic cases. About half the mutations detected (45%) have been found for the first time; they are not described in the SNP database (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). The following mutations (substitutions) have been detected in more than one chromosome, accounting for a total of 59.3% of chromosomes with mutations: Gly190Ser (5.9%), c.1437_1450del14 (9.3%), Ala493Glu (5.1%), Thr550Met (3.4%), Tyr686Stop (5.1%), and Arg894Stop (30.5%).  相似文献   

12.
Myotonia is a symptom of various genetic and acquired skeletal muscular disorders and is characterized by hyperexcitability of the sarcolemma. Here, we have performed a comparative proteomic study of the genetic mouse models ADR, MTO and MTO*5J of human congenital myotonia in order to determine myotonia-specific changes in the global protein complement of gastrocnemius muscle. Proteomic analyses of myotonia in the mouse, which is caused by mutations in the gene encoding the muscular chloride channel Clc1, revealed a generally perturbed protein expression pattern in severely affected ADR and MTO muscle, but less pronounced alterations in mildly diseased MTO*5J mice. Alterations were found in major metabolic pathways, the contractile machinery, ion handling elements, the cellular stress response and cell signaling mechanisms, clearly confirming a glycolytic-to-oxidative transformation process in myotonic fast muscle. In the long-term, a detailed biomarker signature of myotonia will improve our understanding of the pathobiochemical processes underlying this disorder and be helpful in determining how a single mutation in a tissue-specific gene can trigger severe downstream effects on the expression levels of a very large number of genes in contractile tissues.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Voltage-gated ClC chloride channels play important roles in cell volume regulation, control of muscle excitability, and probably transepithelial transport. ClC channels can be functionally expressed without other subunits, but it is unknown whether they function as monomers. We now exploit the properties of human mutations in the muscle chloride channel, ClC-1, to explore its multimeric structure. This is based on analysis of the dominant negative effects of ClC-1 mutations causing myotonia congenita (MC, Thomsen's disease), including a newly identified mutation (P480L) in Thomsen's own family. In a co-expression assay, Thomsen's mutation dramatically inhibits normal ClC-1 function. A mutation found in Canadian MC families (G230E) has a less pronounced dominant negative effect, which can be explained by functional WT/G230E heterooligomeric channels with altered kinetics and selectivity. Analysis of both mutants shows independently that ClC-1 functions as a homooligomer with most likely four subunits.  相似文献   

15.
Expression of chloride channel 1 (CLCN1/ClC-1) in skeletal muscle is driven by alternative splicing, a process regulated in part by RNA-binding protein families MBNL and CELF. Aberrant splicing of CLCN1 produces many mRNAs, which were translated into inactive proteins, resulting in myotonia in myotonic dystrophy (DM), a genetic disorder caused by the expansion of a CTG or CCTG repeat. This increase in abnormal splicing variants containing exons 6B, 7A or the insertion of a TAG stop codon just before exon 7 leads to a decrease in expression of the normal splice pattern. The majority of studies examining splicing in CLCN1 have been performed using mouse Clcn1, as have investigations into the activation and suppression of normal splicing variant expression by MBNL1-3 and CELF3–6, respectively. In contrast, examinations of human CLCN1 have been less common due to the greater complexity of splicing patterns. Here, we constructed a minigene containing CLCN1 exons 5–7 and established a novel assay system to quantify the expression of the normal splicing variant of CLCN1 using real-time RT-PCR. Antisense oligonucleotides could promote normal CLCN1 alternative splicing but the effective sequence was different from that of Clcn1. This result differs from previous reports using Clcn1, highlighting the effect of differences in splicing patterns between mice and humans.  相似文献   

16.
Osteopetrosis is a heterogeneous group of inherited disorders that includes a malignant autosomal recessive form, an intermediate autosomal recessive form and autosomal dominant forms of the disease. Most malignant osteopetroses have been ascribed to mutations in the OC116 gene encoding the human a3 subunit of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase. Few cases of autosomal recessive malignant osteopetrosis have been ascribed to mutations in the chloride channel 7 gene (CLCN7), which accounts for all autosomal dominant type II cases reported to date. Up until now, however, nothing has been known regarding the molecular basis of the intermediate form of osteopetrosis (IARO). Our study of two Portuguese IARO families shows that homozygosity for ClCN7 mutations also accounts for this form of osteopetrosis. The two patients presented with spontaneous fractures in the first years of life and generalised increase of bone density. Direct sequencing of the ClCN7 gene in both patients revealed homozygosity for two mutations (G203D and P470Q). We conclude therefore that ClCN7 mutations not only account for some dominant and malignant forms but also for intermediate forms of osteopetrosis.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Summary Linkage analysis has been carried out in six German families with autosomal dominantly inherited myotonia congenita (Thomsen's disease) using five chromosome 19 markers known to be linked to the gene for myotonic dystrophy (DM). Two of the markers, APOC1 and APOC2, are tightly linked to DM. Close linkage between these markers and myotonia congenita (MC) has been excluded to a distance of 9cM (z=-2.158). These data support the clinical suggestion that MC and DM are non-allelic disorders.  相似文献   

19.

Background

The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) are a heterogenous group of inherited progressive neurodegenerative diseases in different mammalian species. Tibetan Terrier and Polish Owczarek Nizinny (PON) dogs show rare late-onset NCL variants with autosomal recessive inheritance, which can not be explained by mutations of known human NCL genes. These dog breeds represent animal models for human late-onset NCL. In mice the chloride channel 3 gene (Clcn3) encoding an intracellular chloride channel was described to cause a phenotype similar to NCL.

Results

Two full-length cDNA splice variants of the canine CLCN3 gene are reported. The current canine whole genome sequence assembly was used for gene structure analyses and revealed 13 coding CLCN3 exons in 52 kb of genomic sequence. Sequence analysis of the coding exons and flanking intron regions of CLCN3 using six NCL-affected Tibetan terrier dogs and an NCL-affected Polish Owczarek Nizinny (PON) dog, as well as eight healthy Tibetan terrier dogs revealed 13 SNPs. No consistent CLCN3 haplotype was associated with NCL.

Conclusion

For the examined animals we excluded the complete coding region and adjacent intronic regions of canine CLCN3 to harbor disease-causing mutations. Therefore it seems to be unlikely that a mutation in this gene is responsible for the late-onset NCL phenotype in these two dog breeds.  相似文献   

20.
Dent's disease is an X-linked renal tubular disorder characterized by low-molecular-weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, nephrolithiasis, and eventual renal failure. Various types of mutations in the renal chloride channel gene, CLCN5, have been identified in patients with this disease. We studied a Spanish patient with Dent's disease and found, by polymerase chain reaction amplification of the CLCN5 exons, an abnormally large exon 11. Sequencing analysis revealed that this was attributable to the insertion in codon 650 of an Alu element of the "young" Ya5 subfamily. The Alu element was inserted with the same orientation as the CLCN5 gene and arose de novo on the maternal chromosome. Polymorphism analysis indicated that the insertion occurred in the germline of the maternal grandfather. The presence of a long poly(A) tract and evidence for a 16-bp target-site duplication implied that the Alu element was integrated by retrotransposition. This mutation predicts a truncated ClC-5 protein that lacks part of the carboxy-terminus and is likely to result in loss of function of the chloride channel. Insertions of Alu sequences, which are rarely found in coding regions, have occasionally been reported to cause other genetic diseases. However, this is the first report of a retrotransposon insertion in the CLCN5 gene associated with Dent's disease.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号