New family with 8-associated autosomal dominant rimmed vacuolar myopathy.

Neurol Genet

Division of Genetics and Genomic Medicine (S.A.-T., L.W., H.Y.), Department of Pediatrics, University of California, Irvine; Opti West (S.A.-T.), West Anaheim Medical Center, Anaheim; Ambry Genetics (S.T.), Mission Viejo, CA; Miller School of Medicine (M.S.), University of Miami, FL; Folkhälsan Institute of Genetics and the Department of Medical Genetics (A.V., B.U.), Medicum, University of Helsinki; Neuromuscular Research Center (A.V., B.U.), Tampere University and University Hospital, Neurology, Finland; Neuromuscular Program (T.M.), Department of Neurology, University of California-Irvine, Orange; and Neurology Department (B.U.), Vasa Central Hospital, Finland.

Published: August 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new family with autosomal dominant rimmed vacuolar myopathy (RVM) was studied, revealing that the disorder is linked to a specific mutation in the gene.
  • Whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing were utilized alongside muscle biopsies and imaging techniques, showing typical symptoms like muscle atrophy and fatty changes in the muscles.
  • The identified mutation (c.515dupC) caused a frameshift that results in a longer protein, affecting the expression of heat shock protein beta 8 and disrupting autophagy, which could lead to future targeted treatment strategies for RVM.*

Article Abstract

Objective: We clinically and molecularly characterize a new family with autosomal dominant rimmed vacuolar myopathy (RVM) caused by mutations in the gene.

Methods: We performed whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing in the family. Western blot and immunocytochemistry were used to analyze 3 patient fibroblasts, and findings were compared with their age- and sex-matched controls.

Results: Affected patients have distal and proximal myopathy, with muscle biopsy showing rimmed vacuoles, muscle fiber atrophy, and endomysial fibrosis typical of RVM. Muscle MRI showed severe relatively symmetric multifocal fatty degenerative changes of the lower extremities. We identified a duplication of C at position 515 of the gene (c.515dupC) by whole-genome sequencing, which caused a frameshift with a predicted alternate stop codon p.P173SFS*43 in all affected individuals, resulting in an elongated protein product. Western blot and immunocytochemistry studies revealed reduced expression of heat shock protein beta 8 in patient fibroblasts compared with control fibroblasts, in addition to disrupted autophagy pathology.

Conclusions: We report a novel family with autosomal dominant RVM caused by the c.515dupC mutation of the gene, causing a translational frameshift that results in an elongated protein. Understanding the mechanism for the RVM pathology caused by mutated chaperone will permit novel targeted strategies to alter the natural history progression. As next-generation sequencing becomes more available, additional myopathic families will be identified with mutations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6659134PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/NXG.0000000000000349DOI Listing

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