1. Mutation Update: The Spectra of Nebulin Variants and Associated Myopathies
- Author
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Thomas L. Winder, Vilma-Lotta Lehtokari, Nigel F. Clarke, Kathryn N. North, K. Kiiski, Nigel G. Laing, Pauliina Repo, Alan H. Beggs, Kati Donner, Sarah A. Sandaradura, Carol J Saunders, Jennifer A. Frey, Jocelyn Laporte, Norma B. Romero, Carina Wallgren-Pettersson, Peter G. Barth, M. Marttila, Katarina Pelin, Johan T. den Dunnen, and Paediatric Neurology
- Subjects
Genotype ,Muscle Proteins ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Exon ,Nebulin ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nemaline myopathy ,Muscular Diseases ,Databases, Genetic ,actin-myosin ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Myopathy ,Exome ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Mutation ,nemaline (rod) myopathy ,NEB ,Exons ,nebulin ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Alternative Splicing ,Phenotype ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Models, Animal ,Distal Myopathies ,biology.protein ,sarcomere ,medicine.symptom ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
A mutation update on the nebulin gene (NEB) is necessary because of recent developments in analysis methodology, the identification of increasing numbers and novel types of variants, and a widening in the spectrum of clinical and histological phenotypes associated with this gigantic, 183 exons containing gene. Recessive pathogenic variants in NEB are the major cause of nemaline myopathy (NM), one of the most common congenital myopathies. Moreover, pathogenic NEB variants have been identified in core-rod myopathy and in distal myopathies. In this update, we present the disease-causing variants in NEB in 159 families, 143 families with NM, and 16 families with NM-related myopathies. Eighty-eight families are presented here for the first time. We summarize 86 previously published and 126 unpublished variants identified in NEB. Furthermore, we have analyzed the NEB variants deposited in the Exome Variant Server (http://evs.gs.washington.edu/EVS/), identifying that pathogenic variants are a minor fraction of all coding variants (~7%). This indicates that nebulin tolerates substantial changes in its amino acid sequence, providing an explanation as to why variants in such a large gene result in relatively rare disorders. Lastly, we discuss the difficulties of drawing reliable genotype–phenotype correlations in NEB-associated disease.
- Published
- 2014