| Literature DB >> 30257713 |
Guja Astrea1, Alessandro Romano2, Corrado Angelini3, Carlo Giuseppe Antozzi4, Rita Barresi5, Roberta Battini6,7, Carla Battisti8, Enrico Bertini9, Claudio Bruno10, Denise Cassandrini6, Marina Fanin11, Fabiana Fattori9, Chiara Fiorillo12, Renzo Guerrini13, Lorenzo Maggi4, Eugenio Mercuri14, Federica Morani6, Marina Mora4, Francesca Moro6, Ilaria Pezzini6, Esther Picillo15, Michele Pinelli16,17, Luisa Politano15, Anna Rubegni6, Walter Sanseverino18, Marco Savarese17,19,20, Pasquale Striano12, Annalaura Torella17,19, Carlo Pietro Trevisan21, Rosanna Trovato6, Irina Zaraieva22, Francesco Muntoni22,23, Vincenzo Nigro17,19, Adele D'Amico9, Filippo M Santorelli24.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dystroglycanopathy (α-DG) is a relatively common, clinically and genetically heterogeneous category of congenital forms of muscular dystrophy (CMD) and limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) associated with hypoglycosylated α-dystroglycan. To date, mutations in at least 19 genes have been associated with α-DG. One of them, GMPPB, encoding the guanosine-diphosphate-mannose (GDP-mannose) pyrophosphorylase B protein, has recently been associated with a wide clinical spectrum ranging from severe Walker-Warburg syndrome to pseudo-metabolic myopathy and even congenital myasthenic syndromes. We re-sequenced the full set of known disease genes in 73 Italian patients with evidence of either reduced or nearly absent α-dystroglycan to assess genotype-phenotype correlations in this cohort. We used innovative bioinformatic tools to calculate the effects of all described GMPPB mutations on protein function and attempted to correlate them with phenotypic expressions.Entities:
Keywords: Congenital muscular dystrophy; Dystroglycanopathies; GMPPB; Genotype-phenotype correlations; Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30257713 PMCID: PMC6158856 DOI: 10.1186/s13023-018-0863-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical features in 13 patients harboring bi-allelic mutations in GMPPB
| Case/Sex | P1/M | P2/M | P3/M | P4/F | P5/M | P6/F | P7/M | P8/M | P9/Ma | P10/Ma | P11/F | P12/F | P13/M |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mutations | p.I219T | p.T153I | p.K31E | p.T153I | p.P32L | p.G315S | p.S168F | p.R243W | p.D27H p.V330I | p.D27H p.V330I | p.R288Q | p.G220R | p.R287Q |
| Diagnosis | CRB | MEB | CMD-MR | CRB | CRB | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD | LGMD |
| Onset | 18 months | birth | birth | birth | birth | 6 years | 13 years | 20 years | 28 years | 24 years | 7 years | 25 years | 34 years |
| Distribution of weakness | Axial and upper girdle | Proximal lower girdle | generalized | generalized | generalized | Mild upper and lower limb girdle | Mild proximal | Mild proximal | Mild upper and lower limb girdle | Mild upper and lower limb girdle | Mild proximal | Mild proximal | Mild proximal |
| Maximal motor acquisition | Independent walk with widening base | Independent walk with flat foot | Sitting position | none | none | Run with mild clumsiness | run | run | Run but loss of ambulation at 58 years | run | run | run | run |
| Intellectual disability | + (mild) ASD | + (mild) | + (mild) | + (severe) | + (severe) | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Epilepsy | + | + | + | + drug resistant | + | + | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Brain MRI findings: | mild | - | - | mild | mild | - | Not performed | Not performed | Not performed | Not performed | Not performed | Not performed | Not performed |
| Ophthalmologic findings | Strabismus | Congenital cataract | – | Congenital cataract | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Cardiorespiratory findings | – | Respiratory distress at birth | Respiratory distress at birth | Respiratory distress at birth, sudden heart block at 20 months | – | Wolff-Parkinson-White type B syndr.ome | – | – | – | – | Short QT interval | – | – |
| Other features | – | Facial dimorphisms | Facial dimorphisms, foot deformities kyphosis | Arthrogryposis | Tube Feed | Exercise intolerance myoglobinuria | Exercise intolerance | Easy fatigability | – | – | Scoliosis fatigability | Scoliosis fatigability | Mild fatigability |
Abbreviations: M men, F women, WMC white matter changes, GMC grey matter changes, CRB congenital muscular dystrophy with cerebellar involvement, CMD-MR congenital muscular dystrophy with mental retardation, LGMD limb girdle muscular dystrophy;+ present; − absent; athese patients are uncle and nephew; ASD autism spectrum disorder; MEB, muscle-eye-brain disease
*indicates in genetics the presence of a STOP CODON
Fig. 1Morbidity map of GMPPB in Italian patients with α-dystroglycanopathy compared to mutations reported in literature. The scheme of the GMPPB protein is illustrated and the mutations identified in this study depicted in bold (novel mutations are in red, published mutations are in black)
Genetic findings in patients with mutations in GMPPB
| Mutation | SIFT (score) | Polyphen 2 score | Protein domain | Amino acid conservation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | p.I219T | Deleterious (0.04) | Benign 0,267 | N-TC domain | moderately conserved | [ |
| P2 | p.T153I | Tolerated (0.22) | Possibly damaging 0,812 | N-TC domain | weakly conserved | [ |
| P3 |
| Deleterious (0.02) | Probably damaging 0,992 | N-TC domain | highly conserved |
|
| P4 | p.T153I | Tolerated (0.22) | Possibly damaging 0,812 | N-TC domain | weakly conserved | [ |
| P5 | p.P32L | Deleterious (0) | Probably damaging 1,00 | N-TC domain | highly conserved | [ |
| P6 | p.G315S | Deleterious (0,01) | Probably damaging 0,989 | LbH | highly conserved | [ |
| P7 |
| Deleterious (0,01) | Probably damaging 1,00 | N-TC domain | highly conserved |
|
| P8 | p.R243W | Deleterious (0,02) | Benign (0,006) | na | highly conserved | [ |
| P9 | p.D27H | Deleterious (0,02) | Benign 0,089 | N-TC domain | weakly conserved | [ |
| P10 | p.D27H | Deleterious (0,02) | Benign 0,089 | N-TC domain | weakly conserved | [ |
| P11 |
| Deleterious (0.01) | Probably damaging (0.980) | LbH | moderately conserved |
|
| P12 |
| Deleterious (0) | Probably damaging (0.999) | N-TC domain | highly conserved |
|
| P13 | p.R287Q | Tolerated (0.27) | Benign 0,117 | LbH | weakly conserved | [ |
Legend: na not applicable, N-TC domain N terminal catalytic domain, LbH Left-handed parallel beta-Helix domain. Novel mutations are in bold
*indicates in genetics the presence of a STOP CODON
Fig. 2Energy changes of missense mutations in GMPPB. a Histogram of calculated free energy changes (ΔΔG) due to missense mutations in GMPPB. Orange-, gray- and green-shaded bars indicate mutated residues falling in the N-terminal catalytic domain, inter-domains and C-terminal LbH domain, respectively. b The ΔΔG distributions of GMPPB missense mutations. The ΔΔG values of mutations were presented in histograms, using 3 kcal/mol bins (the single mutation with ΔΔG = 13.7 kcal/mol was classified into the > 10 kcal/mol bin) and the distribution was fitted to a Gaussian function. c Histogram of the number of mutations (%) plotted against the predicted effect of mutations on GMPPB stability
Fig. 3Western blot analysis of patients with mutations in the GMPPB gene. Consistent lower mobility shift of β-dystroglycan (β-DG) and variable expression of laminin α2 (LAMA2) in skeletal muscle biopsies from five patients (P1, P2, P3, P6, and P7) with mutations in the GMPPB gene. Myosin heavy chain (MHC) was used as measure of protein loading. CTRL, control muscle