Background: Early-onset myopathies show a wide spectrum of phenotypes and are composed of various types of inherited neuromuscular diseases, making it difficult to diagnose. TTN mutation-related myopathy is a known cause of early-onset myopathy. Since a next-generation sequencing (NGS) has enabled sequencing of the vast amount of DNA, TTN, which is the longest coding sequence of any human gene, mutations can now be revealed. We report a 10-year-old female with severe congenital muscular weakness and delayed motor development since birth.
Methods: Next-generation sequencing as well as electromyography and muscle biopsy were performed.
Results: To date, she is incapable of walking alone. Her younger sister had similar but more severe symptoms with respiratory failure. In electromyography, short-duration, small-amplitude motor unit action potential, and early recruitment patterns were observed in the involved proximal muscles, suggesting myopathy. Muscle histopathology showed a specific atrophy of increased fiber size variability, frequent nuclear internalization, as well as degeneration and regeneration of fibers with type I fiber predominance, consistent with the findings of a previous report about congenital titinopathy. A NGS study revealed two different possible pathogenic variants in TTN: (a) canonical splicing mutation in the intron 105 (c. 29963-1G>C) and (b) frameshift and truncating mutation in the exon 339 (c.92812dup/p.Arg30938LysfsTer15). All variants were confirmed by conventional Sanger sequencing.
Conclusion: We propose that unbiased genomic sequencing can be helpful in screening patients with early-onset myopathy.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6687639 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mgg3.866 | DOI Listing |
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