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Exon skipping mutations in collagen VI are common and are predictive for severity and inheritance

Authors :
Steve Laval
Kevin M. Flanigan
Yaqun Zou
Mon-Li Chu
Rui-Zhu Zhang
Debbie Hicks
K. Bushby
Gihan Tennekoon
Carsten G. Bönnemann
K.K. O'Brien
Francesco Muntoni
R. Charlton
Cecilia Jimenez-Mallebrera
Gudrun Schreiber
M.S. van der Knaap
Richard S. Finkel
Volker Straub
AK Lampe
Dominick Sudano
H. Marks
Pediatric surgery
Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam 2008
Other departments
Source :
Human Mutation, 29(6), 809-822. Wiley-Liss Inc., Lampe, A K, Zou, Y, Sudano, D, O'Brien, K K, Hicks, D, Laval, S H, Charlton, R, Jimenez-Mallebrera, C, Zhang, R Z, Finkel, R S, Tennekoon, G, Schreiber, G, van der Knaap, M S, Marks, H, Straub, V, Flanigan, K M, Chu, M L, Muntoni, F, Bushby, K M D & Bonnemann, C G 2008, ' Exon skipping mutations in collagen VI are common and are predictive for severity and inheritance ', Human Mutation, vol. 29, no. 6, pp. 809-822 . https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.20704, Human mutation, 29(6), 809-822. Wiley-Liss Inc.
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2008.

Abstract

Mutations in the genes encoding collagen VI (COL6A1, COL6A2, and COL6A3) cause Bethlem myopathy (BM) and Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy (UCMD), two related conditions of differing severity. BM is a relatively mild dominantly inherited disorder characterized by proximal weakness and distal joint contractures. UCMD was originally regarded as an exclusively autosomal recessive condition causing severe muscle weakness with proximal joint contractures and distal hyperlaxity. We and others have subsequently modified this model when we described UCMD patients with heterozygous in-frame deletions acting in a dominant-negative way. Here we report 10 unrelated patients with a UCMD clinical phenotype and de novo dominant negative heterozygous splice mutations in COL6A1, COL6A2, and COL6A3 and contrast our findings with four UCMD patients with recessively acting splice mutations and two BM patients with heterozygous splice mutations. We find that the location of the skipped exon relative to the molecular structure of the collagen chain strongly correlates with the clinical phenotype. Analysis by immunohistochemical staining of muscle biopsies and dermal fibroblast cultures, as well as immunoprecipitation to study protein biosynthesis and assembly, suggests different mechanisms each for exon skipping mutations underlying dominant UCMD, dominant BM, and recessive UCMD. We provide further evidence that de novo dominant mutations in severe UCMD occur relatively frequently in all three collagen VI chains and offer biochemical insight into genotype-phenotype correlations within the collagen VI-related disorders by showing that severity of the phenotype depends on the ability of mutant chains to be incorporated in the multimeric structure of collagen VI. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Details

ISSN :
10981004 and 10597794
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f76c3717d551e7d249f699bbda8d0dd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.20704