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1.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), the second most common form of childhood muscular dystrophy in Japan, is an autosomal recessive severe muscular dystrophy associated with an anomaly of the brain. After our initial mapping of the FCMD locus to chromosome 9q31-33, we further defined the locus within a region of ~5 cM between loci D9S127 and CA246, by homozygosity mapping in patients born to consanguineous marriages and by recombination analyses in other families. We also found evidence for strong linkage disequilibrium between FCMD and a polymorphic microsatellite marker, mfd220, which showed no recombination and a lod score of (Z) 17.49. A “111-bp” allele for the mfd220 locus was observed in 22 (34%) of 64 FCMD chromosomes, but it was present in only 1 of 120 normal chromosomes. This allelic association with FCMD was highly significant (χ2 =50.7; P<.0001). Hence, we suspect that the FCMD gene could lie within a few hundred kilobases of the mfd220 locus.  相似文献   

2.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) and laminin-alpha2 deficient congenital muscular dystrophy (MDC1A) are congenital muscular dystrophies (CMDs) and they both are categorized into the same clinical entity of muscular dystrophy as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). All three disorders share a common etiologic defect in the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, which connects muscle structural proteins with the extracellular basement membrane. To investigate the pathophysiology of these CMDs, we generated microarray gene expression profiles of skeletal muscle from patients in various clinical stages. Despite diverse pathological changes, the correlation coefficient of overall gene expression among these samples was considerably high. We performed a multi-dimensional statistical analysis, the Distillation, to extract determinant genes that distinguish CMD muscle from normal controls. Up-regulated genes were primarily extracellular matrix (ECM) components, whereas down-regulated genes included structural components of mature muscle. These observations reflect active interstitial fibrosis with less active regeneration of muscle cell components in the CMDs, characteristics that are clearly distinct from those of DMD. Although the severity of fibrosis varied among the specimens tested, ECM gene expression was consistently high without substantial changes through the clinical course. Further, in situ hybridization showed more prominent ECM gene expression on muscle cells than on interstitial tissue cells, suggesting that ECM components are induced by regeneration process rather than by 'dystrophy.' These data imply that the etiology of FCMD and MDC1A differs from that of the chronic phase of classical muscular dystrophy, and the major pathophysiologic change in CMDs might instead result from primary active fibrosis.  相似文献   

3.
Defects in dystroglycan glycosylation are associated with a group of muscular dystrophies, termed dystroglycanopathies, that include Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD). It is widely believed that abnormal glycosylation of dystroglycan leads to disease-causing membrane fragility. We previously generated knock-in mice carrying a founder retrotransposal insertion in fukutin, the gene responsible for FCMD, but these mice did not develop muscular dystrophy, which hindered exploring therapeutic strategies. We hypothesized that dysferlin functions may contribute to muscle cell viability in the knock-in mice; however, pathological interactions between glycosylation abnormalities and dysferlin defects remain unexplored. To investigate contributions of dysferlin deficiency to the pathology of dystroglycanopathy, we have crossed dysferlin-deficient dysferlin sjl/sjl mice to the fukutin-knock-in fukutin Hp/− and Large-deficient Large myd/myd mice, which are phenotypically distinct models of dystroglycanopathy. The fukutin Hp/− mice do not show a dystrophic phenotype; however, (dysferlin sjl/sjl: fukutin Hp/−) mice showed a deteriorated phenotype compared with (dysferlin sjl/sjl: fukutin Hp/+) mice. These data indicate that the absence of functional dysferlin in the asymptomatic fukutin Hp/− mice triggers disease manifestation and aggravates the dystrophic phenotype. A series of pathological analyses using double mutant mice for Large and dysferlin indicate that the protective effects of dysferlin appear diminished when the dystrophic pathology is severe and also may depend on the amount of dysferlin proteins. Together, our results show that dysferlin exerts protective effects on the fukutin Hp/− FCMD mouse model, and the (dysferlin sjl/sjl: fukutin Hp/−) mice will be useful as a novel model for a recently proposed antisense oligonucleotide therapy for FCMD.  相似文献   

4.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), an autosomal recessive disorder with a high prevalence in the Japanese population, is characterised by severe muscular dystrophy associated with brain malformation (cortical dysgenesis) and mental retardation. In Japan, 87% of FCMD-bearing chromosomes carry a 3-kb retrotransposal insertion of tandemly repeated sequences within the disease gene recently identified on chromosome 9q31, and most of them share a common founder haplotype. FCMD is the first human disease known to be caused primarily by an ancient retrotransposal integration. By applying two methods for the study of linkage disequilibrium between flanking polymorphic markers and the disease locus, and of its decay over time, the age of the insertion mutation causing FCMD in Japanese patients is calculated to be approximately 102 generations (95% confidence interval: 86-117 g), or slightly less. The estimated age dates the most recent common ancestor of the mutation-bearing chromosomes back to the time (or a few centuries before) the Yayoi people started migrating to Japan from the Korean peninsula. This finding makes the molecular population genetics of FCMD understandable in the context of Japan's history and the founder effect consistent with the prevalent theory on the origins of the modern Japanese population.  相似文献   

5.
Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2D (LGMD 2D) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the α-sarcoglycan gene. To determine how α-sarcoglycan deficiency leads to muscle fiber degeneration, we generated and analyzed α-sarcoglycan– deficient mice. Sgca-null mice developed progressive muscular dystrophy and, in contrast to other animal models for muscular dystrophy, showed ongoing muscle necrosis with age, a hallmark of the human disease. Sgca-null mice also revealed loss of sarcolemmal integrity, elevated serum levels of muscle enzymes, increased muscle masses, and changes in the generation of absolute force. Molecular analysis of Sgca-null mice demonstrated that the absence of α-sarcoglycan resulted in the complete loss of the sarcoglycan complex, sarcospan, and a disruption of α-dystroglycan association with membranes. In contrast, no change in the expression of ε-sarcoglycan (α-sarcoglycan homologue) was observed. Recombinant α-sarcoglycan adenovirus injection into Sgca-deficient muscles restored the sarcoglycan complex and sarcospan to the membrane. We propose that the sarcoglycan–sarcospan complex is requisite for stable association of α-dystroglycan with the sarcolemma. The Sgca-deficient mice will be a valuable model for elucidating the pathogenesis of sarcoglycan deficient limb-girdle muscular dystrophies and for the development of therapeutic strategies for this disease.  相似文献   

6.
Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is a rare neuromuscular disorder characterized by early contractures, slowly progressive muscular weakness, and life-threatening heart conduction disturbances that can develop into a cardiomyopathy. There is wide intrafamilial and interfamilial clinical variability. Genetically, X-linked recessive (EMD1), autosomal dominant (EMD2), and autosomal recessive (EMD3) forms can be distinguished, which are associated with mutations in the STA, LMNA, SYNE1, SYNE2, and FHL1 genes. Only approximately 46% of unrelated EDMD patients have a mutation in the genes mentioned above, pointing to further genetic heterogeneity in EDMD.  相似文献   

7.
The recent identification of mutations in genes encoding demonstrated or putative glycosyltransferases has revealed a novel mechanism for congenital muscular dystrophy. Hypoglycosylated alpha-dystroglycan (alpha-DG) is commonly seen in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB), Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), and Large(myd) mice. POMGnT1 and POMTs, the gene products responsible for MEB and WWS, respectively, synthesize unique O-mannose sugar chains on alpha-DG. The function of fukutin, the gene product responsible for FCMD, remains undetermined. Here we show that fukutin co-localizes with POMGnT1 in the Golgi apparatus. Direct interaction between fukutin and POMGnT1 was confirmed by co-immunoprecipitation and two-hybrid analyses. The transmembrane region of fukutin mediates its localization to the Golgi and participates in the interaction with POMGnT1. Y371C, a missense mutation found in FCMD, retains fukutin in the ER and also redirects POMGnT1 to the ER. Finally, we demonstrate reduced POMGnT1 enzymatic activity in transgenic knock-in mice carrying the retrotransposal insertion in the fukutin gene, the prevalent mutation in FCMD. From these findings, we propose that fukutin forms a complex with POMGnT1 and may modulate its enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

8.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) is an autosomal recessive, severe muscular dystrophy associated with brain anomalies. After our initial mapping of the FCMD locus to 9q31–33, we performed linkage disequilibrium analysis, which led us to suspect that the FCMD gene lay within a region of less than 100 kb containing D9S2107. In the present study, we developed two new microsatellites (D9S2170 and D9S2171) in close vicinity to D9S2107 and examined haplotypes of FCMD chromosomes by using four markers (cen-D9S2105-D9S2170-D9S2171-D9S2107-tel). As 82% of the FCMD chromosomes that we examined shared the founder haplotype (138–192–147–183) and 94% of the FCMD patients in our panel carried founder haplotypes on one or both chromosomes, the data supported the hypothesis of a single founder of this disease in the Japanese population. Eight haplotypes different from the founder’s were observed in FCMD chromosomes, indicating that eight different FCMD mutations in addition to the founder’s have occurred in Japan. Moreover, we have detected several historical recombinations that have disrupted the founder haplotype at D9S2105 or D9S2170 and conclude that the FCMD gene is probably located just centromeric to D9S2170. Received: 16 May 1998 / Accepted: 10 June 1998  相似文献   

9.
Muscular dystrophy‐dystroglycanopathy (MDDG) is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous group of muscular disorders, characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy or later‐onset limb‐girdle muscular dystrophy accompanied by brain and ocular abnormalities, resulting from aberrant alpha‐dystroglycan glycosylation. Exome sequencing and Sanger sequencing were performed on a six‐generation consanguineous Han Chinese family, members of which had autosomal recessive MDDG. Compound heterozygous mutations, c.1338+1G>A (p.H415Kfs*3) and c.1457G>C (p.W486S, rs746849558), in the protein O‐mannosyltransferase 1 gene (POMT1), were identified as the genetic cause. Patients that exhibited milder MDDG manifested as later‐onset progressive proximal pelvic, shoulder girdle and limb muscle weakness, joint contractures, mental retardation and elevated creatine kinase, without structural brain or ocular abnormalities, were further genetically diagnosed as MDDGC1. The POMT1 gene splice‐site mutation (c.1338+1G>A) which leads to exon 13 skipping and results in a truncated protein may contribute to a severe phenotype, while the allelic missense mutation (p.W486S) may reduce MDDG severity. These findings may expand phenotype and mutation spectrum of the POMT1 gene. Clinical diagnosis supplemented with molecular screening may result in more accurate diagnoses of, prognoses for, and improved genetic counselling for this disease.  相似文献   

10.
As the specific composition of lipids is essential for the maintenance of membrane integrity, enzyme function, ion channels, and membrane receptors, an alteration in lipid composition or metabolism may be one of the crucial changes occurring during skeletal and cardiac myopathies. Although the inheritance (autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, and X-linked traits) and underlying/defining mutations causing these myopathies are known, the contribution of lipid homeostasis in the progression of these diseases needs to be established. The purpose of this review is to present the current knowledge relating to lipid changes in inherited skeletal muscle disorders, such as Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy, myotonic muscular dystrophy, limb-girdle myopathic dystrophies, desminopathies, rostrocaudal muscular dystrophy, and Dunnigan-type familial lipodystrophy. The lipid modifications in familial hypertrophic and dilated cardiomyopathies, as well as Barth syndrome and several other cardiac disorders associated with abnormal lipid storage, are discussed. Information on lipid alterations occurring in these myopathies will aid in the design of improved methods of screening and therapy in children and young adults with or without a family history of genetic diseases.  相似文献   

11.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), the second most common form of muscular dystrophy in Japan, is an autosomal recessive severe muscular dystrophy associated with brain anomalies. After our initial mapping of the FCMD locus to chromosome 9q31-33, we have further defined the locus within a approximately 5-cM region between D9S127 and D9S2111 and have found linkage disequilibrium between FCMD and D9S306 in this candidate region on 9q31. The high prevalence of FCMD among the Japanese, who are a relatively isolated population, provides an opportunity to utilize linkage-disequilibrium mapping. We developed three new microsatellites, near D9S306, from the FCMD YAC contig, determined their positions on YACs, and performed linkage-disequilibrium mapping with these markers and other newly published loci. The maximum value of p(excess), which represents the strength of linkage disequilibrium, was obtained at D9S2107; and this value showed a relatively steady rise and fall across the region that is likely to contain FCMD. Distances between FCMD and each marker were presumed to be approximately 1 Mb, approximately 350 kb, approximately 140 kb, approximately 20 kb, approximately 280 kb, approximately 450 kb, and approximately 740 kb for D9S306, A107XF9, D9S2105, D9S2107, D9S172, D9S299, and D9S2109, respectively. Haplotype analysis using the three closest markers D9S2105, D9S2107, and D9S172 indicated that most FCMD-bearing chromosomes are derived from a single ancestral founder and suggested that these markers can be used for the diagnosis of sporadic FCMD. Thus, the FCMD gene is most likely to lie within a region of <100 kb containing D9S2107.  相似文献   

12.
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) is an autosomal recessive severe muscular dystrophy associated with brain malformation. The gene responsible for FCMD was mapped to chromosome 9q31, a region in which convincing evidence of strong linkage disequilibrium between FCMD and mfd220 (D9S306) was recently found. FCMD is also characterized clinically by a peak motor function which, at best, allows patients to sit unassisted or slide on the buttocks. However, a small fraction of patients acquire the capacity to walk unassisted. Whether such ambulant cases belong to the FCMD spectrum or to a different disease entity has been a topic of considerable debate. We performed linkage analysis for ten families with ambulant cases using DNA markers flanking the FCMD locus. The mfd220 locus yielded a significant lod score of 3.09 for ambulant FCMD. We also found evidence for linkage disequilibrium between ambulant FCMD and mfd220. We further conducted haplotype analysis in FCMD siblings with different phenotypes, one of whom was ambulant while the other was not. The results indicate that the FCMD siblings share exactly the same haplotype at nine marker loci spanning 23.3 cM surrounding the FCMD locus. On the basis of these results, we conclude that, genetically, ambulant cases are, in fact, part of the FCMD spectrum. Received: 28 June 1996  相似文献   

13.
《Autophagy》2013,9(12):1559-1561
Mitophagy, selective autophagy of mitochondria, has been extensively demonstrated in cultured cell models but has never been described in skeletal muscle in the context of muscle disease. We recently reported the first example of human muscle disease where mitophagy plays a role in the peculiar muscle pathology. This disease is caused by loss-of-function mutations in the CHKB gene encoding choline kinase β. “Patients” and rostrocaudal muscular dystrophy (rmd) mice, spontaneous Chkb mutants, develop congenital muscular dystrophy with a peculiar mitochondrial abnormality—mitochondria are markedly enlarged at the periphery of muscle fibers and absent from the center. Choline kinase is the first enzymatic step in a biosynthetic pathway for phosphatidylcholine, the most abundant phospholipid in eukaryotes. Our discovery demonstrates that a phosphatydilcholine biosynthetic defect leads to mitochondrial dysfunction and increased mitophagy.  相似文献   

14.
Muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) is an autosomal recessive disease of unknown etiology characterized by severe mental retardation, ocular abnormalities, congenital muscular dystrophy, and a polymicrogyria-pachygyria-type neuronal migration disorder of the brain. A similar combination of muscle and brain involvement is also seen in Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) and Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD). Whereas the gene underlying FCMD has been mapped and cloned, the genetic location of the WWS gene is still unknown. Here we report the assignment of the MEB gene to chromosome 1p32-p34 by linkage analysis and homozygosity mapping in eight families with 12 affected individuals. After a genomewide search for linkage in four affected sib pairs had pinpointed the assignment to 1p, the MEB locus was more precisely assigned to a 9-cM interval flanked by markers D1S200 proximally and D1S211 distally. Multipoint linkage analysis gave a maximum LOD score of 6.17 at locus D1S2677. These findings provide a starting point for the positional cloning of the disease gene, which may play an important role in muscle function and brain development. It also provides an opportunity to test other congenital muscular dystrophy phenotypes, in particular WWS, for linkage to the same locus.  相似文献   

15.
Two autosomal recessive muscle diseases, limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B (LGMD2B) and Miyoshi myopathy (MM), are caused by mutations in the dysferlin gene. These mutations result in poor ability to repair cell membrane damage, which is suggested to be the cause for this disease. However, many patients who share clinical features with MM-type muscular dystrophy do not carry mutations in dysferlin gene. To understand the basis of MM that is not due to mutations in dysferlin gene, we analyzed cells from patients in one such family. In these patients, we found no defects in several potential candidates - annexin A2, caveolin-3, myoferlin and the MMD2 locus on chromosome 10p. Similar to dysferlinopathy, these cells also exhibit membrane repair defects and the severity of the defect correlated with severity of their disease. However, unlike dysferlinopathy, none of the conventional membrane repair pathways are defective in these patient cells. These results add to the existing evidence that cell membrane repair defect may be responsible for MM-type muscular dystrophy and indicate that a previously unsuspected genetic lesion that affects cell membrane repair pathway is responsible for the disease in the non-dysferlin MM patients.  相似文献   

16.
Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is an autosomal recessive developmental disorder characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy and complex brain and eye abnormalities. A similar combination of symptoms is presented by two other human diseases, muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) and Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD). Although the genes underlying FCMD (Fukutin) and MEB (POMGnT1) have been cloned, loci for WWS have remained elusive. The protein products of POMGnT1 and Fukutin have both been implicated in protein glycosylation. To unravel the genetic basis of WWS, we first performed a genomewide linkage analysis in 10 consanguineous families with WWS. The results indicated the existence of at least three WWS loci. Subsequently, we adopted a candidate-gene approach in combination with homozygosity mapping in 15 consanguineous families with WWS. Candidate genes were selected on the basis of the role of the FCMD and MEB genes. Since POMGnT1 encodes an O-mannoside N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase, we analyzed the possible implication of O-mannosyl glycan synthesis in WWS. Analysis of the locus for O-mannosyltransferase 1 (POMT1) revealed homozygosity in 5 of 15 families. Sequencing of the POMT1 gene revealed mutations in 6 of the 30 unrelated patients with WWS. Of the five mutations identified, two are nonsense mutations, two are frameshift mutations, and one is a missense mutation. Immunohistochemical analysis of muscle from patients with POMT1 mutations corroborated the O-mannosylation defect, as judged by the absence of glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan. The implication of O-mannosylation in MEB and WWS suggests new lines of study in understanding the molecular basis of neuronal migration.  相似文献   

17.
Alpha-dystroglycan is a component of the dystrophin-glycoprotein-complex, which is the major mechanism of attachment between the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. Muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy, ocular abnormalities and lissencephaly. We recently found that MEB is caused by mutations in the protein O-linked mannose beta1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (POMGnT1) gene. POMGnT1 is a glycosylation enzyme that participates in the synthesis of O-mannosyl glycan, a modification that is rare in mammals but is known to be a laminin-binding ligand of alpha-dystroglycan. Here we report a selective deficiency of alpha-dystroglycan in MEB patients. This finding suggests that alpha-dystroglycan is a potential target of POMGnT1 and that altered glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan may play a critical role in the pathomechanism of MEB and some forms of muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The myodystrophy (myd) mutation arose spontaneously and has an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Homozygous mutant mice display a severe, progressive muscular dystrophy. Using a positional cloning approach, we identified the causative mutation in myd as a deletion within the Large gene, which encodes a putative glycosyltransferase with two predicted catalytic domains. By immunoblotting, the α-subunit of dystroglycan, a key muscle membrane protein, is abnormal in myd mice. This aberrant protein might represent altered glycosylation of the protein and contribute to the muscular dystrophy phenotype. Our results are discussed in the light of recent reports describing mutations in other glycosyltransferase genes in several forms of human muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

20.
Mucolipidosis type IV is a rare autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder reported among Ashkenazi Jews and to a lesser extent in other ethnic groups. Several mutations have been reported in MCOLN1 which is the only known gene associated with the disorder. Here we report the first Saudi patient with Mucolipidosis type IV from a consanguineous family with two branches having a total of five patients carrying a novel transition mutation, c.1307A > G (p.Y436C) in exon 11. The clinical course of the patient was nonspecific and a lysosomal storage disorder was not highly suspected due to lack of coarse facial features, organomegaly and skeletal findings of dysostosis multiplex. The detailed bioinformatics analysis on the deleterious effects of the mutation is discussed. Emphasis is made on the importance of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings and serum gastrin level as key clues to the diagnosis of this often subtle neurodevelopmental disorder.  相似文献   

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