| Literature DB >> 25260562 |
Johann Böhm1, Valérie Biancalana2, Edoardo Malfatti3, Nicolas Dondaine4, Catherine Koch1, Nasim Vasli1, Wolfram Kress5, Matthias Strittmatter6, Ana Lia Taratuto7, Hernan Gonorazky8, Pascal Laforêt9, Thierry Maisonobe10, Montse Olivé11, Laura Gonzalez-Mera11, Michel Fardeau12, Nathalie Carrière13, Pierre Clavelou13, Bruno Eymard9, Marc Bitoun14, John Rendu15, Julien Fauré15, Joachim Weis16, Jean-Louis Mandel2, Norma B Romero12, Jocelyn Laporte17.
Abstract
Centronuclear myopathies are congenital muscle disorders characterized by type I myofibre predominance and an increased number of muscle fibres with nuclear centralization. The severe neonatal X-linked form is due to mutations in MTM1, autosomal recessive centronuclear myopathy with neonatal or childhood onset results from mutations in BIN1 (amphiphysin 2), and dominant cases were previously associated to mutations in DNM2 (dynamin 2). Our aim was to determine the genetic basis and physiopathology of patients with mild dominant centronuclear myopathy without mutations in DNM2. We hence established and characterized a homogeneous cohort of nine patients from five families with a progressive adult-onset centronuclear myopathy without facial weakness, including three sporadic cases and two families with dominant disease inheritance. All patients had similar histological and ultrastructural features involving type I fibre predominance and hypotrophy, as well as prominent nuclear centralization and clustering. We identified heterozygous BIN1 mutations in all patients and the molecular diagnosis was complemented by functional analyses. Two mutations in the N-terminal amphipathic helix strongly decreased the membrane-deforming properties of amphiphysin 2 and three stop-loss mutations resulted in a stable protein containing 52 supernumerary amino acids. Immunolabelling experiments revealed abnormal central accumulation of dynamin 2, caveolin-3, and the autophagic marker p62, and general membrane alterations of the triad, the sarcolemma, and the basal lamina as potential pathological mechanisms. In conclusion, we identified BIN1 as the second gene for dominant centronuclear myopathy. Our data provide the evidence that specific BIN1 mutations can cause either recessive or dominant centronuclear myopathy and that both disorders involve different pathomechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: BIN1; DNM2; T-tubule; amphiphysin 2; centronuclear myopathy
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25260562 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awu272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501