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Whole-exome sequencing identifies novel pathogenic mutations and putative phenotype-influencing variants in Polish limb-girdle muscular dystrophy patients
Authors:Email authorEmail author  Anna?Macias  Marcin?Piechota  Micha??Korostyński  Anna?Potulska-Chromik  Maria?Jolanta?Redowicz  Cezary?Zekanowski
Institution:1.Department of Neurodegenerative Disorders, Mossakowski Medical Research Centre,Polish Academy of Sciences,Warsaw,Poland;2.Department of Neurology,Medical University of Warsaw,Warsaw,Poland;3.Department of Molecular Neuropharmacology,Institute of Pharmacology, Polish Academy of Sciences,Krakow,Poland;4.Laboratory of Molecular Basis of Cell Motility, Department of Biochemistry,Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology,Warsaw,Poland
Abstract:

Background

Limb girdle muscular dystrophies (LGMD) are a group of heterogeneous hereditary myopathies with similar clinical symptoms. Disease onset and progression are highly variable, with an elusive genetic background, and around 50% cases lacking molecular diagnosis.

Methods

Whole exome sequencing (WES) was performed in 73 patients with clinically diagnosed LGMD. A filtering strategy aimed at identification of variants related to the disease included integrative analysis of WES data and human phenotype ontology (HPO) terms, analysis of genes expressed in muscle, analysis of the disease-associated interactome and copy number variants analysis.

Results

Genetic diagnosis was possible in 68.5% of cases. On average, 36.3 rare variants in genes associated with various muscle diseases per patient were found that could relate to the clinical phenotype. The putative causative mutations were mostly in LGMD-associated genes, but also in genes not included in the current LGMD classification (DMD, COL6A2, and COL6A3). In three patients, mutations in two genes were suggested as the joint cause of the disease (CAPN3+MYH7, COL6A3+CACNA1S, DYSF+MYH7). Moreover, a variety of phenotype-influencing variants were postulated, including in patients with an identified already known primary pathogenic mutation.

Conclusions

We hypothesize that LGMD could be better described as oligogenic disorders in which dominant clinical presentation can result from the combined effect of mutations in a set of genes. In this view, the inter- and intrafamilial variability could reflect a specific genetic background and the presence of sets of phenotype-influencing or co-causative mutations in genes that either interact with the known LGMD-associated genes or are a part of the same pathways or structures.
Keywords:
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