6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bc0c3
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A series of West European patients with severe cardiac and skeletal myopathy associated with a de novo R406W mutation in desmin.
Kye-yoon ParkHans H. GoebelIsidro FerrerCarsten G. BönnemannAyush DagvadorjMartin HalleMarinos C. DalakasPatrick VicartMontse OlivéLev G. GoldfarbJean-andoni UrtizbereaAleksey Shatunovsubject
AdultMaleModels Molecularmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyNeurologyHeart diseaseAdolescentAmino Acid MotifsCardiomyopathymacromolecular substancesDiseaseBiologyProtein Structure SecondaryDesmin03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineMuscular DiseasesmedicineHumansMuscular dystrophyMyopathyMuscle SkeletalConserved Sequence030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesMuscle WeaknessBase SequenceMyocardiumMuscle weaknessAnatomymedicine.diseasePedigreeEuropeHeart BlockNeurologyAmino Acid SubstitutionMutationDisease ProgressionDesminFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomCardiomyopathies030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Desminopathy is a familial or sporadic cardiac and skeletal muscular dystrophy associated with mutations in desmin. We have previously characterized a de novo desmin R406W mutation in a patient of European origin with early onset muscle weakness in the lower extremities and atrioventricular conduction block requiring a permanent pacemaker. The disease relentlessly progressed resulting in severe incapacity within 5 years after onset. We have now identified three other patients with early onset rapidly progressive cardiac and skeletal myopathy caused by this same desmin R406W mutation. The mutation was present in each studied patient, but not in their parents or other unaffected family members, indicating that the mutation in all four cases was generated de novo. The patients' mutation-carrying chromosomes showed no similarity, suggesting that the R406W mutation has occurred independently. These observations strongly confirm that the de novo R406W desmin mutation is the genetic basis for early-onset cardiac and skeletal myopathy in patients with sporadic disease and indicate that desmin position 406 is a hot spot for spontaneous mutations. The high pathogenic potential of this mutation can be explained by its location in the highly conserved YRKLLEGEE motif at the C-terminal end of the 2B helix that has a critical role in the process of desmin filament assembly.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2003-03-05 | Journal of neurology |