| Literature DB >> 31769566 |
Nurit Assia Batzir1,2, Pranjali Kishor Bhagwat1,3, Austin Larson4, Zeynep Coban Akdemir1, Maciej Bagłaj5, Leon Bofferding6, Katherine B Bosanko7, Skander Bouassida8, Bert Callewaert9,10, Ashley Cannon11, Yazmin Enchautegui Colon12, Adolfo D Garnica7, Margaret H Harr13, Sandra Heck6, Anna C E Hurst11, Shalini N Jhangiani14, Bertrand Isidor15, Rebecca O Littlejohn1,16, Pengfei Liu1, Pilar Magoulas1,2, Helen Mar Fan17, Ronit Marom1,2, Scott McLean1,16, Marjan M Nezarati18, Kimberly M Nugent1,16, Michael B Petersen19, Maria L Rocha8, Elizabeth Roeder1,16, Robert Smigiel20, Ian Tully17, James Weisfeld-Adams12, Katerina O Wells21, Jennifer E Posey1, James R Lupski1,2,14,22, Arthur L Beaudet1,2,22, Michael F Wangler1,2,3,22.
Abstract
Visceral myopathy with abnormal intestinal and bladder peristalsis includes a clinical spectrum with megacystis-microcolon intestinal hypoperistalsis syndrome and chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. The vast majority of cases are caused by dominant variants in ACTG2; however, the overall genetic architecture of visceral myopathy has not been well-characterized. We ascertained 53 families, with visceral myopathy based on megacystis, functional bladder/gastrointestinal obstruction, or microcolon. A combination of targeted ACTG2 sequencing and exome sequencing was used. We report a molecular diagnostic rate of 64% (34/53), of which 97% (33/34) is attributed to ACTG2. Strikingly, missense mutations in five conserved arginine residues involving CpG dinucleotides accounted for 49% (26/53) of disease in the cohort. As a group, the ACTG2-negative cases had a more favorable clinical outcome and more restricted disease. Within the ACTG2-positive group, poor outcomes (characterized by total parenteral nutrition dependence, death, or transplantation) were invariably due to one of the arginine missense alleles. Analysis of specific residues suggests a severity spectrum of p.Arg178>p.Arg257>p.Arg40 along with other less-frequently reported sites p.Arg63 and p.Arg211. These results provide genotype-phenotype correlation for ACTG2-related disease and demonstrate the importance of arginine missense changes in visceral myopathy.Entities:
Keywords: ACTG2; dysmotility; megacystis-microcolon intestinal hypoperistalsis; smooth muscle; visceral myopathy
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31769566 PMCID: PMC7720429 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878