Central Core Disease: Facial Weakness Differentiating Biallelic from Monoallelic Forms

Author:

Cotta AnaORCID,Souza Lucas Santos,Carvalho Elmano,Feitosa Leticia Nogueira,Cunha Antonio,Navarro Monica Machado,Valicek Jaquelin,Menezes Miriam Melo,Neves Simone Vilela Nunes,Xavier-Neto Rafael,Vargas Antonio Pedro,Takata Reinaldo Issao,Paim Julia Filardi,Vainzof MarizORCID

Abstract

Central Core Disease (CCD) is a genetic neuromuscular disorder characterized by the presence of cores in muscle biopsy. The inheritance has been described as predominantly autosomal dominant (AD), and the disease may present as severe neonatal or mild adult forms. Here we report clinical and molecular data on a large cohort of Brazilian CCD patients, including a retrospective clinical analysis and molecular screening for RYR1 variants using Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS). We analyzed 27 patients from 19 unrelated families: four families (11 patients) with autosomal dominant inheritance (AD), two families (3 patients) with autosomal recessive (AR), and 13 sporadic cases. Biallelic RYR1 variants were found in six families (two AR and four sporadic cases) of the 14 molecularly analyzed families (~43%), suggesting a higher frequency of AR inheritance than expected. None of these cases presented a severe phenotype. Facial weakness was more common in biallelic than in monoallelic patients (p = 0.0043) and might be a marker for AR forms. NGS is highly effective for the identification of RYR1 variants in CCD patients, allowing the discovery of a higher proportion of AR cases with biallelic mutations. These data have important implications for the genetic counseling of the families.

Funder

São Paulo Research Foundation

National Council for Scientific and Technological Development

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

Reference28 articles.

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