A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Out-of-Frame Mutations in ACTN2 Last Exon Cause a Dominant Distal Myopathy With Facial Weakness




AuthorsSavarese Marco, Vihola Anna, Jokela Manu E, Huovinen Sanna Pauliina, Gerevini Simonetta, Torella Annalaura, Johari Mridul, Scarlato Marina, Jonson Per Harald, Onore Maria Elena, Hackman Peter, Gautel Mathias, Nigro Vincenzo, Previtali Stefano Carlo, Udd Bjarne

PublisherLIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS

Publication year2021

JournalNeurology-Genetics

Journal name in sourceNEUROLOGY-GENETICS

Journal acronymNEUROL-GENET

Article numberARTN e619

Volume7

Issue5

Number of pages5

ISSN2376-7839

eISSN2376-7839

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1212/NXG.0000000000000619

Web address https://ng.neurology.org/content/7/5/e619

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/67667805


Abstract

Background and Objectives

To clinically, genetically, and histopathologically characterize patients presenting with an unusual combination of distal myopathy and facial weakness, without involvement of upper limb or shoulder girdle muscles.

Methods

Two families with a novel form of actininopathy were identified. Patients had been followed up over 10 years. Their molecular genetic diagnosis was not clear after extensive investigations, including analysis of candidate genes and FSHD1-related D4Z4 repeats.

Results

Patients shared a similar clinical phenotype and a common pattern of muscle involvement. They presented with a very slowly progressive myopathy involving anterior lower leg and facial muscles. Muscle MRI finding showed complete fat replacement of anterolateral compartment muscles of the lower legs with variable involvement of soleus and gastrocnemius but sparing thigh muscles. Muscle biopsy showed internalized nuclei, myofibrillar disorganization, and rimmed vacuoles. High-throughput sequencing identified in each proband a heterozygous single nucleotide deletion (c.2558del and c.2567del) in the last exon of the ACTN2 gene. The deletions are predicted to lead to a novel but unstructured slightly extended C-terminal amino acid sequence.

Discussion

Our findings indicate an unusual form of actininopathy with specific molecular and clinical features. Actininopathy should be considered in the differential diagnosis of distal myopathy combined with facial weakness.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 10:36