Clinical, genetic, and pathologic characterization of FKRP Mexican founder mutation c.1387A>G

Author:

Lee Angela J.,Jones Karra A.,Butterfield Russell J.,Cox Mary O.,Konersman Chamindra G.,Grosmann Carla,Abdenur Jose E.,Boyer Monica,Beson Brent,Wang Ching,Dowling James J.,Gibbons Melissa A.,Ballard Alison,Janas Joanne S.,Leshner Robert T.,Donkervoort Sandra,Bönnemann Carsten G.,Malicki Denise M.,Weiss Robert B.,Moore Steven A.,Mathews Katherine D.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo characterize the clinical phenotype, genetic origin, and muscle pathology of patients with the FKRP c.1387A>G mutation.MethodsStandardized clinical data were collected for all patients known to the authors with c.1387A>G mutations in FKRP. Muscle biopsies were reviewed and used for histopathology, immunostaining, Western blotting, and DNA extraction. Genetic analysis was performed on extracted DNA.ResultsWe report the clinical phenotypes of 6 patients homozygous for the c.1387A>G mutation in FKRP. Onset of symptoms was <2 years, and 5 of the 6 patients never learned to walk. Brain MRIs were normal. Cognition was normal to mildly impaired. Microarray analysis of 5 homozygous FKRP c.1387A>G patients revealed a 500-kb region of shared homozygosity at 19q13.32, including FKRP. All 4 muscle biopsies available for review showed end-stage dystrophic pathology, near absence of glycosylated α-dystroglycan (α-DG) by immunofluorescence, and reduced molecular weight of α-DG compared with controls and patients with homozygous FKRP c.826C>A limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.ConclusionsThe clinical features and muscle pathology in these newly reported patients homozygous for FKRP c.1387A>G confirm that this mutation causes congenital muscular dystrophy. The clinical severity might be explained by the greater reduction in α-DG glycosylation compared with that seen with the c.826C>A mutation. The shared region of homozygosity at 19q13.32 indicates that FKRP c.1387A>G is a founder mutation with an estimated age of 60 generations (∼1,200–1,500 years).

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical)

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