Publications by authors named "Massimo Bado"

Objective: To define the clinical and laboratory findings in a novel autosomal recessive white matter disorder called hypomyelination and congenital cataract, recently found to be caused by a deficiency of a membrane protein, hyccin, encoded by the DRCTNNB1A gene located on chromosome 7p21.3-p15.3.

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We report a novel nonsense mitochondrial cytochrome b mutation (G15170A) in a 40-year-old woman with progressive exercise intolerance and lactic acidosis. Muscle biopsy showed several cytochrome c oxidase-positive ragged-red fibers, and reduced activities of respiratory chain complexes I and III. This mutation, resulting in the loss of 228 amino acids of the protein, was very abundant in the patient's muscle, but undetectable in lymphocytes and fibroblasts.

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We report a novel T14687C mutation in the mitochondrial transfer ribonucleic acid glutamic acid gene in a 16-year-old boy with myopathy and lactic acidosis, retinopathy, and progressive respiratory failure leading to death. A muscle biopsy showed cytochrome c oxidase-negative ragged-red fibers, and biochemical analysis of the respiratory chain enzymes in muscle homogenate revealed complex I and complex IV deficiencies. The mutation, which affects the trinucleotide (TpsiC) loop, was nearly homoplasmic in the muscle DNA of the proband, but it was absent in his blood and in the blood from the asymptomatic mother, suggesting that it may have been a spontaneous somatic mutation in muscle.

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Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a progressive lethal muscle disease that affects young boys. Dystrophin, absent in DMD and reduced in the milder form Becker Muscular Dystrophy (BMD), binds to several membrane-associated proteins known as dystrophin-associated proteins (DAPs). Once this critical structural link is disrupted, muscle fibers become more vulnerable to mechanical and osmotic stress.

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We report a 16-month-old boy with psychomotor regression, muscle hypotonia, peripheral neuropathy, and lactic acidosis. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed a bilateral abnormal signal in the substantia nigra and in the subthalamic nucleus, suggestive of Leigh disease. Histochemical analysis of skeletal muscle showed decreased cytochrome-c oxidase activity.

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Caveolin-3, a muscle specific caveolin-related protein, is the principal structural protein of caveolar membranes. We have recently identified an autosomal dominant form of limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD-1C) that is due to caveolin-3 deficiency and caveolin-3 gene mutations. Here, we studied by electron microscopy, including freeze-fracture and lanthanum staining, the distribution of caveolae and the organization of the T-tubule system in caveolin-3 deficient human muscle fibers.

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