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Recessive RYR1 mutations cause unusual congenital myopathy with prominent nuclear internalization and large areas of myofibrillar disorganization

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2011
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Bevilacqua, Jorge
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Recessive RYR1 mutations cause unusual congenital myopathy with prominent nuclear internalization and large areas of myofibrillar disorganization
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Author
  • Bevilacqua, Jorge;
  • Monnier, N.;
  • Bitoun, Marc;
  • Eymard, B.;
  • Ferreiro, A.;
  • Monges, S.;
  • Lubieniecki, F.;
  • Taratuto, A. L.;
  • Laquerrière, A.;
  • Claeys, K. G.;
  • Marty, I.;
  • Fardeau, M.;
  • Guicheney, P.;
  • Lunardi, J.;
  • Romero, N. B.;
Abstract
Aims: To report the clinical, pathological and genetic findings in a group of patients with a previously not described phenotype of congenital myopathy due to recessive mutations in the gene encoding the type 1 muscle ryanodine receptor channel (RYR1). Methods: Seven unrelated patients shared a predominant axial and proximal weakness of varying severity, with onset during the neonatal period, associated with bilateral ptosis and ophthalmoparesis, and unusual muscle biopsy features at light and electron microscopic levels. Results: Muscle biopsy histochemistry revealed a peculiar morphological with dominant malignant hyperthermia susceptibility. Only two mutations were located in the C-terminal transmembrane domain whereas the others were distributed throughout the cytoplasmic region of RyR1. Conclusion: Our data enlarge the spectrum of RYR1 mutations and highlight their clinical and morphological heterogeneity. pattern characterized by numerous internalized myonuclei in up to 51% of fibres and large areas of myofibrillar disorganization with undefined borders. Ultrastructurally, such areas frequently occupied the whole myofibre cross section and extended to a moderate number of sarcomeres in length. Molecular genetic investigations identified recessive mutations in the ryanodine receptor (RYR1) gene in six compound heterozygous patients and one homozygous patient. Nine mutations are novel and four have already been reported either as pathogenic recessive mutations or as changes affecting a residue associated A congenital myopathy featuring ptosis and external ophthalmoplegia, concomitant with the novel histopathological phenotype showing fibres with large, poorly delimited areas of myofibrillar disorganization and internal nuclei, is highly suggestive of an RYR1-related congenital myopathy.
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This work was supported by the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM), the Association Française contre les Myopathies (AFM), the Association Institut de Myologie (AIM), the National Research Agency (ANR) and The Programme of Collaboration ECOS-SECyT (A02S02), France-Argentina and the Genopole d’Evry. Jorge A. Bevilacqua was supported by the Program Alban, The European Union Program of High Level Scholarships for Latin America, scholarship No.E04E028343CL and the Association Institut de Myologie (AIM), France.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/128867
DOI: doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2990.2010.01149.x
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Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology (2011), 37, 271–284
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