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Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy

See Cannon (doi: 10.1093/brain/awv400 ) for a scientific commentary on this article. Congenital myopathies are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of muscle disorders characterized by congenital or early-onset hypotonia and muscle weakness, and specific pathological features on muscle b...

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Autores principales: Zaharieva, Irina T., Thor, Michael G., Oates, Emily C., van Karnebeek, Clara, Hendson, Glenda, Blom, Eveline, Witting, Nanna, Rasmussen, Magnhild, Gabbett, Michael T., Ravenscroft, Gianina, Sframeli, Maria, Suetterlin, Karen, Sarkozy, Anna, D’Argenzio, Luigi, Hartley, Louise, Matthews, Emma, Pitt, Matthew, Vissing, John, Ballegaard, Martin, Krarup, Christian, Slørdahl, Andreas, Halvorsen, Hanne, Ye, Xin Cynthia, Zhang, Lin-Hua, Løkken, Nicoline, Werlauff, Ulla, Abdelsayed, Mena, Davis, Mark R., Feng, Lucy, Phadke, Rahul, Sewry, Caroline A., Morgan, Jennifer E., Laing, Nigel G., Vallance, Hilary, Ruben, Peter, Hanna, Michael G., Lewis, Suzanne, Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan, Männikkö, Roope, Muntoni, Francesco
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4766374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26700687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv352
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author Zaharieva, Irina T.
Thor, Michael G.
Oates, Emily C.
van Karnebeek, Clara
Hendson, Glenda
Blom, Eveline
Witting, Nanna
Rasmussen, Magnhild
Gabbett, Michael T.
Ravenscroft, Gianina
Sframeli, Maria
Suetterlin, Karen
Sarkozy, Anna
D’Argenzio, Luigi
Hartley, Louise
Matthews, Emma
Pitt, Matthew
Vissing, John
Ballegaard, Martin
Krarup, Christian
Slørdahl, Andreas
Halvorsen, Hanne
Ye, Xin Cynthia
Zhang, Lin-Hua
Løkken, Nicoline
Werlauff, Ulla
Abdelsayed, Mena
Davis, Mark R.
Feng, Lucy
Phadke, Rahul
Sewry, Caroline A.
Morgan, Jennifer E.
Laing, Nigel G.
Vallance, Hilary
Ruben, Peter
Hanna, Michael G.
Lewis, Suzanne
Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan
Männikkö, Roope
Muntoni, Francesco
author_facet Zaharieva, Irina T.
Thor, Michael G.
Oates, Emily C.
van Karnebeek, Clara
Hendson, Glenda
Blom, Eveline
Witting, Nanna
Rasmussen, Magnhild
Gabbett, Michael T.
Ravenscroft, Gianina
Sframeli, Maria
Suetterlin, Karen
Sarkozy, Anna
D’Argenzio, Luigi
Hartley, Louise
Matthews, Emma
Pitt, Matthew
Vissing, John
Ballegaard, Martin
Krarup, Christian
Slørdahl, Andreas
Halvorsen, Hanne
Ye, Xin Cynthia
Zhang, Lin-Hua
Løkken, Nicoline
Werlauff, Ulla
Abdelsayed, Mena
Davis, Mark R.
Feng, Lucy
Phadke, Rahul
Sewry, Caroline A.
Morgan, Jennifer E.
Laing, Nigel G.
Vallance, Hilary
Ruben, Peter
Hanna, Michael G.
Lewis, Suzanne
Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan
Männikkö, Roope
Muntoni, Francesco
author_sort Zaharieva, Irina T.
collection PubMed
description See Cannon (doi: 10.1093/brain/awv400 ) for a scientific commentary on this article. Congenital myopathies are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of muscle disorders characterized by congenital or early-onset hypotonia and muscle weakness, and specific pathological features on muscle biopsy. The phenotype ranges from foetal akinesia resulting in in utero or neonatal mortality, to milder disorders that are not life-limiting. Over the past decade, more than 20 new congenital myopathy genes have been identified. Most encode proteins involved in muscle contraction; however, mutations in ion channel-encoding genes are increasingly being recognized as a cause of this group of disorders. SCN4A encodes the α-subunit of the skeletal muscle voltage-gated sodium channel (Na (v) 1.4). This channel is essential for the generation and propagation of the muscle action potential crucial to muscle contraction. Dominant SCN4A gain-of-function mutations are a well-established cause of myotonia and periodic paralysis. Using whole exome sequencing, we identified homozygous or compound heterozygous SCN4A mutations in a cohort of 11 individuals from six unrelated kindreds with congenital myopathy. Affected members developed in utero - or neonatal-onset muscle weakness of variable severity. In seven cases, severe muscle weakness resulted in death during the third trimester or shortly after birth. The remaining four cases had marked congenital or neonatal-onset hypotonia and weakness associated with mild-to-moderate facial and neck weakness, significant neonatal-onset respiratory and swallowing difficulties and childhood-onset spinal deformities. All four surviving cohort members experienced clinical improvement in the first decade of life. Muscle biopsies showed myopathic features including fibre size variability, presence of fibrofatty tissue of varying severity, without specific structural abnormalities. Electrophysiology suggested a myopathic process, without myotonia. In vitro functional assessment in HEK293 cells of the impact of the identified SCN4A mutations showed loss-of-function of the mutant Na (v) 1.4 channels. All, apart from one, of the mutations either caused fully non-functional channels, or resulted in a reduced channel activity. Each of the affected cases carried at least one full loss-of-function mutation. In five out of six families, a second loss-of-function mutation was present on the trans allele. These functional results provide convincing evidence for the pathogenicity of the identified mutations and suggest that different degrees of loss-of-function in mutant Na (v) 1.4 channels are associated with attenuation of the skeletal muscle action potential amplitude to a level insufficient to support normal muscle function. The results demonstrate that recessive loss-of-function SCN4A mutations should be considered in patients with a congenital myopathy.
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spelling pubmed-47663742016-02-26 Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy Zaharieva, Irina T. Thor, Michael G. Oates, Emily C. van Karnebeek, Clara Hendson, Glenda Blom, Eveline Witting, Nanna Rasmussen, Magnhild Gabbett, Michael T. Ravenscroft, Gianina Sframeli, Maria Suetterlin, Karen Sarkozy, Anna D’Argenzio, Luigi Hartley, Louise Matthews, Emma Pitt, Matthew Vissing, John Ballegaard, Martin Krarup, Christian Slørdahl, Andreas Halvorsen, Hanne Ye, Xin Cynthia Zhang, Lin-Hua Løkken, Nicoline Werlauff, Ulla Abdelsayed, Mena Davis, Mark R. Feng, Lucy Phadke, Rahul Sewry, Caroline A. Morgan, Jennifer E. Laing, Nigel G. Vallance, Hilary Ruben, Peter Hanna, Michael G. Lewis, Suzanne Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan Männikkö, Roope Muntoni, Francesco Brain Original Articles See Cannon (doi: 10.1093/brain/awv400 ) for a scientific commentary on this article. Congenital myopathies are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of muscle disorders characterized by congenital or early-onset hypotonia and muscle weakness, and specific pathological features on muscle biopsy. The phenotype ranges from foetal akinesia resulting in in utero or neonatal mortality, to milder disorders that are not life-limiting. Over the past decade, more than 20 new congenital myopathy genes have been identified. Most encode proteins involved in muscle contraction; however, mutations in ion channel-encoding genes are increasingly being recognized as a cause of this group of disorders. SCN4A encodes the α-subunit of the skeletal muscle voltage-gated sodium channel (Na (v) 1.4). This channel is essential for the generation and propagation of the muscle action potential crucial to muscle contraction. Dominant SCN4A gain-of-function mutations are a well-established cause of myotonia and periodic paralysis. Using whole exome sequencing, we identified homozygous or compound heterozygous SCN4A mutations in a cohort of 11 individuals from six unrelated kindreds with congenital myopathy. Affected members developed in utero - or neonatal-onset muscle weakness of variable severity. In seven cases, severe muscle weakness resulted in death during the third trimester or shortly after birth. The remaining four cases had marked congenital or neonatal-onset hypotonia and weakness associated with mild-to-moderate facial and neck weakness, significant neonatal-onset respiratory and swallowing difficulties and childhood-onset spinal deformities. All four surviving cohort members experienced clinical improvement in the first decade of life. Muscle biopsies showed myopathic features including fibre size variability, presence of fibrofatty tissue of varying severity, without specific structural abnormalities. Electrophysiology suggested a myopathic process, without myotonia. In vitro functional assessment in HEK293 cells of the impact of the identified SCN4A mutations showed loss-of-function of the mutant Na (v) 1.4 channels. All, apart from one, of the mutations either caused fully non-functional channels, or resulted in a reduced channel activity. Each of the affected cases carried at least one full loss-of-function mutation. In five out of six families, a second loss-of-function mutation was present on the trans allele. These functional results provide convincing evidence for the pathogenicity of the identified mutations and suggest that different degrees of loss-of-function in mutant Na (v) 1.4 channels are associated with attenuation of the skeletal muscle action potential amplitude to a level insufficient to support normal muscle function. The results demonstrate that recessive loss-of-function SCN4A mutations should be considered in patients with a congenital myopathy. Oxford University Press 2016-03 2015-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4766374/ /pubmed/26700687 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv352 Text en © The Author (2015). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ ), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Articles
Zaharieva, Irina T.
Thor, Michael G.
Oates, Emily C.
van Karnebeek, Clara
Hendson, Glenda
Blom, Eveline
Witting, Nanna
Rasmussen, Magnhild
Gabbett, Michael T.
Ravenscroft, Gianina
Sframeli, Maria
Suetterlin, Karen
Sarkozy, Anna
D’Argenzio, Luigi
Hartley, Louise
Matthews, Emma
Pitt, Matthew
Vissing, John
Ballegaard, Martin
Krarup, Christian
Slørdahl, Andreas
Halvorsen, Hanne
Ye, Xin Cynthia
Zhang, Lin-Hua
Løkken, Nicoline
Werlauff, Ulla
Abdelsayed, Mena
Davis, Mark R.
Feng, Lucy
Phadke, Rahul
Sewry, Caroline A.
Morgan, Jennifer E.
Laing, Nigel G.
Vallance, Hilary
Ruben, Peter
Hanna, Michael G.
Lewis, Suzanne
Kamsteeg, Erik-Jan
Männikkö, Roope
Muntoni, Francesco
Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title_full Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title_fullStr Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title_full_unstemmed Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title_short Loss-of-function mutations in SCN4A cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
title_sort loss-of-function mutations in scn4a cause severe foetal hypokinesia or ‘classical’ congenital myopathy
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4766374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26700687
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv352
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