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CAV3 mutations causing exercise intolerance, myalgia and rhabdomyolysis: expanding the phenotypic spectrum of caveolinopathies

Authors :
David Hilton-Jones
Mark R. Davis
Lucy Feng
Matt Parton
Phillipa J. Lamont
Ros Quinlivan
Adnan Y. Manzur
M. Desikan
William Wallefeld
Renata S Scalco
Gianina Ravenscroft
Henry Houlden
Heinz Jungbluth
Janice L. Holton
Rita Barresi
Julie Marsh
Anthony H.V. Schapira
Michael G. Hanna
Nigel G. Laing
A. Gardiner
Chris Turner
Robert D S Pitceathly
Kate Bushby
Anne-Marie Childs
Rahul Phadke
Doreen Fialho
Elaine Murphy
Source :
Scalco, R S, Gardiner, A R, Pitceathly, R D S, Hilton-Jones, D, Schapira, A H, Turner, C, Parton, M, Desikan, M, Barresi, R, Marsh, J, Manzur, A Y, Childs, A-M, Feng, L, Murphy, E, Lamont, P J, Ravenscroft, G, Wallefeld, W, Davis, M R, Laing, N G, Holton, J L, Fialho, D, Bushby, K, Hanna, M G, Phadke, R, Jungbluth, H, Houlden, H & Quinlivan, R 2016, ' CAV3 mutations causing exercise intolerance, myalgia and rhabdomyolysis: expanding the phenotypic spectrum of caveolinopathies ', Neuromuscular Disorders, vol. 26, no. 8, pp. 504-510 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2016.05.006
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Rhabdomyolysis is often due to a combination of environmental trigger(s) and genetic predisposition; however, the underlying genetic cause remains elusive in many cases. Mutations in CAV3 lead to various neuromuscular phenotypes with partial overlap, including limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 1C (LGMD1C), rippling muscle disease, distal myopathy and isolated hyperCKemia. Here we present a series of eight patients from seven families presenting with exercise intolerance and rhabdomyolysis caused by mutations in CAV3 diagnosed by next generation sequencing (NGS) (n = 6). Symptoms included myalgia (n = 7), exercise intolerance (n = 7) and episodes of rhabdomyolysis (n = 2). Percussion-induced rapid muscle contractions (PIRCs) were seen in five out of six patients examined. A previously reported heterozygous mutation in CAV3 (p.T78M) and three novel variants (p.V14I, p.F41S, p.F54V) were identified. Caveolin-3 immunolabeling in muscle was normal in 3/4 patients; however, immunoblotting showed more than 50% reduction of caveolin-3 in five patients compared with controls. This case series demonstrates that exercise intolerance, myalgia and rhabdomyolysis may be caused by CAV3 mutations and broadens the phenotypic spectrum of caveolinopathies. In our series, immunoblotting was a more sensitive method to detect reduced caveolin-3 levels than immunohistochemistry in skeletal muscle. Patients presenting with muscle pain, exercise intolerance and rhabdomyolysis should be routinely tested for PIRCs as this may be an important clinical clue for caveolinopathies, even in the absence of other "typical" features. The use of NGS may expand current knowledge concerning inherited diseases, and unexpected/atypical phenotypes may be attributed to well-known human disease genes.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scalco, R S, Gardiner, A R, Pitceathly, R D S, Hilton-Jones, D, Schapira, A H, Turner, C, Parton, M, Desikan, M, Barresi, R, Marsh, J, Manzur, A Y, Childs, A-M, Feng, L, Murphy, E, Lamont, P J, Ravenscroft, G, Wallefeld, W, Davis, M R, Laing, N G, Holton, J L, Fialho, D, Bushby, K, Hanna, M G, Phadke, R, Jungbluth, H, Houlden, H & Quinlivan, R 2016, ' CAV3 mutations causing exercise intolerance, myalgia and rhabdomyolysis: expanding the phenotypic spectrum of caveolinopathies ', Neuromuscular Disorders, vol. 26, no. 8, pp. 504-510 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2016.05.006
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb4206a9c75fb9afb2f63425303beffb