Author:
Ben Yaou Rabah,Hubert Aurélie,Nelson Isabelle,Dahlqvist Julia R.,Gaist David,Streichenberger Nathalie,Beuvin Maud,Krahn Martin,Petiot Philippe,Parisot Frédéric,Michel Fabrice,Malfatti Edoardo,Romero Norma,Carlier Robert Yves,Eymard Bruno,Labrune Philippe,Duno Morten,Krag Thomas,Cerino Mathieu,Bartoli Marc,Bonne Gisèle,Vissing John,Laforet Pascal,Petit François M.
Abstract
Objective:To describe the variability of muscle symptoms in patients carrying mutations in the GYG1 gene, encoding glycogenin-1, an enzyme involved in the biosynthesis of glycogen, and to discuss genotype-phenotype relations.Methods:We describe 9 patients from 5 families in whom muscle biopsies showed vacuoles with an abnormal accumulation of glycogen in muscle fibers, partially α-amylase resistant suggesting polyglucosan bodies. The patients had either progressive early-onset limb-girdle weakness or late-onset distal or scapuloperoneal muscle affection as shown by muscle imaging. No clear definite cardiac disease was found. Histologic and protein analysis investigations were performed on muscle.Results:Genetic analyses by direct or exome sequencing of the GYG1 gene revealed 6 different GYG1 mutations. Four of the mutations were novel. They were compound heterozygous in 3 families and homozygous in 2. Protein analysis revealed either the absence of glycogenin-1 or reduced glycogenin-1 expression with impaired glucosylation.Conclusions:Our report extends the genetic and clinical spectrum of glycogenin-1–related myopathies to include scapuloperoneal and distal affection with glycogen accumulation.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical)
Cited by
12 articles.
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