| Literature DB >> 27718144 |
Carola Hedberg-Oldfors1, Emma Glamuzina2, Peter Ruygrok3, Lisa J Anderson4, Perry Elliott5, Oliver Watkinson5, Chris Occleshaw3, Malcolm Abernathy6, Clinton Turner7, Nicola Kingston7, Elaine Murphy8, Anders Oldfors9.
Abstract
We describe a new type of cardiomyopathy caused by a mutation in the glycogenin-1 gene (GYG1). Three unrelated male patients aged 34 to 52 years with cardiomyopathy and abnormal glycogen storage on endomyocardial biopsy were homozygous for the missense mutation p.Asp102His in GYG1. The mutated glycogenin-1 protein was expressed in cardiac tissue but had lost its ability to autoglucosylate as demonstrated by an in vitro assay and western blot analysis. It was therefore unable to form the primer for normal glycogen synthesis. Two of the patients showed similar patterns of heart dilatation, reduced ejection fraction and extensive late gadolinium enhancement on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. These two patients were severely affected, necessitating cardiac transplantation. The cardiomyocyte storage material was characterized by large inclusions of periodic acid and Schiff positive material that was partly resistant to alpha-amylase treatment consistent with polyglucosan. The storage material had, unlike normal glycogen, a partly fibrillar structure by electron microscopy. None of the patients showed signs or symptoms of muscle weakness but a skeletal muscle biopsy in one case revealed muscle fibres with abnormal glycogen storage. Glycogenin-1 deficiency is known as a rare cause of skeletal muscle glycogen storage disease, usually without cardiomyopathy. We demonstrate that it may also be the cause of severe cardiomyopathy and cardiac failure without skeletal muscle weakness. GYG1 should be included in cardiomyopathy gene panels.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27718144 PMCID: PMC5203857 DOI: 10.1007/s10545-016-9978-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982
Results of clinical, radiological and laboratory examinations
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | Male | Male |
| Descent | New Zealand/British | British | British |
| Age, years | 49 | 52 | 34 |
| Age of onset, years | 34 | 46/50 | 23 |
| Initial symptoms | Shortness of breath, chest pain on exertion, lethargy and palpitations | CVA/Chest pain, sweatiness and palpitations | Shortness of breath and chest pain |
| ICD | Age 45 years | Age 49 years | Age 31 years |
| Cardiac MRI (with gadolinium) | Severely impaired left ventricular function with severe dilatation. Thinned out myocardium in the posterolateral wall showing almost full thickness scarring. Diffusely patchy scarring mostly in the epicardial and mid-myocardial regions. | Severely dilated LV with a large area of thinning and akinesis affecting the entire lateral wall from base to apex (anterolateral, anterior and inferolateral walls). Other regions were hypertrophied with preserved systolic function. Extensive late gadolinium enhancement in the entire thinned region. | Very extensive (>50 %) late gadolinium enhancement in a non-ischaemic pattern. Moderate LV impairment. Maximum LV wall thickness of 23 mm. |
| ECG (before ICD insertion) | Sinus rhythm. Widespread T wave inversion. QRS duration 120 ms | Sinus rhythm with poor lateral R wave progression. QRS duration 126 ms. QTc normal. | T wave inversion in leads I, II, III, AVF and V6 with ST elevation in leads V3-V6. QRS duration 102 ms. QTc normal. |
| Echocardiogram | Age 48 years | Age 50 years | Age 32 years |
| Left ventricular end-diastolic volume (ml) | 281 | 277 | 151 |
| Septal wall thickness (cm) | 1,4 | 1,6 | 1,6 |
| Posterior wall thickness (cm) | 0,9 | 1,0 | 1,4 |
| Ejection fraction (%) | 25–30 | 30–35 | 59 |
| Coronary angiogram | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Heart transplantation | Age 48 years | Age 52 years | No |
| Endomyocardial biopsy | PAS-positive inclusions partial removal by diastase | PAS-positive inclusions partial removal by diastase | PAS-positive inclusions |
| Electron microscopy | Normal glycogen and filamentous or amorphous material | Not performed | Storage of non-lysosomal glycogen |
| Muscle biopsy | Variability of fibre size and scattered fibres with accumulation of PAS-positive inclusions | Not performed | Not performed |
| Skeletal muscle strength | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| GYG1 mutation | Homozygous | Homozygous | Homozygous |
ICD Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator, CVA Cerebral vascular accident, MRI Magnetic resonance imaging, LV Left ventricle, ECG Electrocardiography, PAS Periodic acid-Schiff
Fig. 1Cardiac MRI (A-E) and explant (F) of patient 1, ECG (G) and cardiac MRI (H) of patient 2 and cardiac MRI (I) of patient 3. a A 2-chamber vertical long-axis delayed enhancement image of the LV demonstrating very extensive increased signal in the inferior surface, the distal half of the diagonal surface, and the LV apex, predominantly in the mid-myocardial and subepicardial layers of the myocardium. The abnormal signal indicates the presence of fibrosis or scar tissue. b A 4-chamber long-axis delayed enhancement image of the LV, demonstrating extensive abnormal enhancement consistent with fibrosis or scar formation in the mid-myocardial and subepicardial layers of the myocardium, involving the entire obtuse marginal surface, the apex and the posterior ventricular septum. c A 2-chamber vertical long-axis cine frame of the LV at end-diastole, which is dilated and globular in shape. There is variable wall thickness, with thinning of the distal half of the diagonal surface and the apex. An increased number of trabeculations in these regions indicates localized non-compaction of the myocardium. d A short-axis cine frame of the middle third of the LV at end-diastole shows thinning of the obtuse marginal surface, with markedly increased trabeculation of both this region, and, albeit to a lesser extent, of the diagonal and anterior septal myocardium also. e A short-axis cine frame of the basal LV at end-systole demonstrates variable increase in wall thickening in the ventricular septum and diagonal surfaces, with marked wall thinning in the posterior obtuse marginal and inferior surfaces. f Transverse section of the explanted heart including the right ventricle interventricular septum and parts or the left ventricle demonstrating variable thickening of the septum and thin and trabeculated posterior wall (arrow). g ECG of patient 2 demonstrating sinus rhythm with very poor R wave progression in the lateral leads. h Cardiac MRI of patient 2 demonstrating a markedly dilated left ventricle with thin lateral wall with late gadolinium contrast enhancement. i Cardiac MRI of patient 3 demonstrating extensive late gadolinium contrast enhancement
Fig. 2Endomyocardial and skeletal muscle biopsy of patient 1 with abnormal glycogen storage; (a) in virtually every cardiomyocyte there is a large central region with storage material (arrows; hematoxylin and eosin); (b) the storage material is intensely positive in PAS staining; (c) it is to a minor degree resistant to alpha-amylase treatment; (d) electron microscopy demonstrating accumulation of glycogen with normal appearance (arrow-head) as well as paler regions with storage of other type of material (arrow) that at higher magnification (e, inset in Fig. 1d) has a fibrillar (arrows) or unstructured (arrow-head) appearance. There is also some normal glycogen particles in addition to mitochondria and lipofuscin in this image; (f) skeletal muscle biopsy demonstrating by PAS staining that some fibres that look pale show accumulation of PAS positive material (arrows). There are also PAS positive inclusions in fibres with normal glycogen content (arrow-head)
Fig. 2Genetic and protein analysis. a Pedigrees of the families. b Chromatogram of normal GYG1 DNA sequence with the DxD motif indicated by hatched line. c Chromatogram demonstrating a homozygous missense mutation in GYG1 (c.304G > C, p.Asp102His), the hatched line shows that the DxD motif is mutated. d Western blot analysis of glycogenin-1 on protein extracted from cardiac muscle biopsy specimen from patient 1 and a control sample performed without (−) or with alpha-amylase (+) treatment. In patient 1 glycogenin-1 was detected both without and with alpha-amylase treatment compared to control sample where glycogenin-1 was only detected after alpha-amylase treatment. The band corresponding to myosin heavy chain was used as loading control. e Cell-free autoglycosylation in vitro revealed that the protein with the mutation p.Asp102His was not able to autoglycosylate demonstrated with only one band after addition of uridine diphoshate (UDP) glucose (+) compared to wild type (WT) protein which was able to autoglycosylate demonstrated with two bands corresponding to both unglucosylated (lower band) and glycosylated (upper band) glycogenin-1. Unglucosylated glycogenin-1 weighs approximately 1 kDa less than free autoglucosylated protein. After alpha-amylase treatment the short glucose polymers are cleaved off resulting in only one band for WT compared to p.Asp102His which was not affected because of absence formation of short glucose polymers
Fig. 4The glycogenin-1 protein. a Alignment of glycogenin-1 proteins in different species. The bottom three lines demonstrating proteins belonging to other gene families with DxD motif. The amino acid affected by the mutation in red and within the hatched line is the conserved DxD motif. b Illustration of the stereo view of glycogenin-1 with the amino acids in the DxD motif marked with colours, the affected aspartic acid at position 102 in red, alanine and aspartic acid at positions 103 and 104 respectively in green. UDP-glucose is labelled in blue and Mn2+ is labelled in purple. This figure was generated using The PyMOL Molecular Graphics System, Version 1.7.2.1 Schrödinger, LLC. c Schematic illustration of the interaction between glycogenin-1, UDP-glucose and Mn2+. Amino acids within the DxD motif are included and labelled in colours, the amino acid affected by mutation is in red (modified from Gibbons et al 2002). d Higher magnification of the stereo view demonstrating the UDP-glucose, Mn2+ and the DxD motif. The polar contact between UDP-glucose and Asp102 is demonstrated with the yellow-hatched line. The same colour scheme is used throughout the figure