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STAC3 variants cause a congenital myopathy with distinctive dysmorphic features and malignant hyperthermia susceptibility

Authors :
Mark R. Davis
Glyn Williams
Irina Zaharieva
Lucy Feng
Helge Amthor
Adnan Y. Manzur
Muriel Holder
Gina L. O'Grady
Caroline Sewry
Gemma Poke
Julien Fauré
Carsten G. Bönnemann
Pinki Munot
Sandra Donkervoort
Susan Treves
Sabrina W. Yum
A. Reghan Foley
Edmar Zanoteli
Joanne Dixon
Livija Medne
Juliet Taylor
Anna Sarkozy
E. Malfatti
John Rendu
Christoph Bachmann
J. Andoni Urtizberea
Susana Quijano-Roy
Francesco Muntoni
Christopher John Holmes
Laurent Servais
Rahul Phadke
Norma B. Romero
Laila Bastaki
Osorio Abath Neto
Heinz Jungbluth
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

SH3 and cysteine-rich domain-containing protein 3 (STAC3) is an essential component of the skeletal muscle excitation-contraction coupling (ECC) machinery, though its role and function are not yet completely understood. Here, we report 18 patients carrying a homozygous p.(Trp284Ser) STAC3 variant in addition to a patient compound heterozygous for the p.(Trp284Ser) and a novel splice site change (c.997-1G > T). Clinical severity ranged from prenatal onset with severe features at birth, to a milder and slowly progressive congenital myopathy phenotype. A malignant hyperthermia (MH)-like reaction had occurred in several patients. The functional analysis demonstrated impaired ECC. In particular, KCl-induced membrane depolarization resulted in significantly reduced sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release. Co-immunoprecipitation of STAC3 with CaV 1.1 in patients and control muscle samples showed that the protein interaction between STAC3 and CaV 1.1 was not significantly affected by the STAC3 variants. This study demonstrates that STAC3 gene analysis should be included in the diagnostic work up of patients of any ethnicity presenting with congenital myopathy, in particular if a history of MH-like episodes is reported. While the precise pathomechanism remains to be elucidated, our functional characterization of STAC3 variants revealed that defective ECC is not a result of CaV 1.1 sarcolemma mislocalization or impaired STAC3-CaV 1.1 interaction.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d224fb63a7ec0b59240311d959152f24