AI Article Synopsis

  • Four patients from different families had mild myopathy or high serum creatine kinase levels and showed unusual inclusions in muscle samples.
  • These inclusions did not stain with standard histochemical methods but reacted positively to specific proteins associated with calcium regulation in muscle cells.
  • The findings indicate a new type of myopathy characterized by an excess of certain proteins that are normally found in the muscle's sarcoplasmic reticulum.

Article Abstract

We describe four patients, from four different families, affected by a mild myopathy or asymptomatic elevated serum creatine kinase levels, in whom toluidine blue-stained semithin sections of muscle specimens revealed inclusions of different size and shape. The inclusions did not stain by routine histochemical studies. The sarcoplasmic or endoplasmic reticulum calcium 1 (SERCA1) ATPase and/or calsequestrin reactivity of inclusions, by immunohistochemistry, and the SERCA1- and calsequestrin-increased expression, by immunoblot, suggested that inclusions were constituted by an excess of proteins normally present in the terminal cisternae of sarcoplasmic reticulum. Our cases, both sporadic and familial, represent a new type of surplus protein myopathy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awl128DOI Listing

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