| Literature DB >> 34149409 |
Leonela Luce1,2, Micaela Carcione1,2, Chiara Mazzanti1,2, Paula I Buonfiglio3, Viviana Dalamón3, Lilia Mesa4, Alberto Dubrovsky4, José Corderí4, Florencia Giliberto1,2.
Abstract
Dystrophinopathies cover a spectrum of rare progressive X-linked muscle diseases, arising from DMD mutations. They are among the most common pediatric muscular dystrophies, being Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) the most severe form. Despite the fact that there is still no cure for these serious diseases, unprecedented advances are being made for the development of therapies for DMD. Some of which are already conditionally approved: exon skipping and premature stop codon read-through. The present work aimed to characterize the mutational spectrum of DMD in an Argentinian cohort, to identify candidates for available pharmacogenetic treatments and finally, to conduct a comparative analysis of the Latin American (LA) frequencies of mutations amenable for available DMD therapies. We studied 400 patients with clinical diagnosis of dystrophinopathy, implementing a diagnostic molecular algorithm including: MLPA/PCR/Sanger/Exome and bioinformatics. We also performed a meta-analysis of LA's metrics for DMD available therapies. The employed algorithm resulted effective for the achievement of differential diagnosis, reaching a detection rate of 97%. Because of this, corticosteroid treatment was correctly indicated and validated in 371 patients with genetic confirmation of dystrophinopathy. Also, 20 were eligible for exon skipping of exon 51, 21 for exon 53, 12 for exon 45 and another 70 for premature stop codon read-through therapy. We determined that 87.5% of DMD patients will restore the reading frame with the skipping of only one exon. Regarding nonsense variants, UGA turned out to be the most frequent premature stop codon observed (47%). According to the meta-analysis, only four LA countries (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico) provide the complete molecular algorithm for dystrophinopathies. We observed different relations among the available targets for exon skipping in the analyzed populations, but a more even proportion of nonsense variants (∼40%). In conclusion, this manuscript describes the theragnosis carried out in Argentinian dystrophinopathy patients. The implemented molecular algorithm proved to be efficient for the achievement of differential diagnosis, which plays a crucial role in patient management, determination of the standard of care and genetic counseling. Finally, this work contributes with the international efforts to characterize the frequencies and variants in LA, pillars of drug development and theragnosis.Entities:
Keywords: Latin America; duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD); dystrophinopathies; exon skipping; meta-analysis; mutagenic spectrum; nonsense; theragnosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149409 PMCID: PMC8209366 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.648390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Flow chart of search and selection algorithm of Latin American reports for the meta-analysis.
FIGURE 2Molecular algorithm The figure shows the workflow carried out to achieve differential diagnosis of patients with clinical suspicion of Dystrophinopathy and to determine candidates for mutation-specific therapies. “MLPA”: multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. “WES”: whole exon sequencing. “MD”: Muscular Dystrophy. * In silico panel was created considering genes associated with the development of MDs (Group 1) according to the “Gene table of neuromuscular disorders (nuclear genome)” and its annual updates. **Re-analysis of the WES results on the basis of the discovery of new genes involved with MDs and the revision of the ACMG classification of sequence variants.
Nonsense variants characterization.
| Lab identification | Patients* | Nonsense variant (HGVS, c./p.) | Exon | Dys domains | WT aa | WT codón | Stop codon | DNA subst mut |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #392 | 1 | c.433C > T/p.(Arg145*) | 6 | Actin binding | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #56 | 1 | c.620T > G/p.(Leu207*) | 7 | Actin binding | Leu | TTA | T | Transversion |
| #598 | 1 | c.701C > G/p.(Ser234*) | 8 | Actin binding | Ser | TCG | T | Transversion |
| #620 | 1 | c.826C > T/p.(Gln276*) | 8 | Actin binding | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #104 | 1 | c.907C > T/p.(Gln303*) | 9 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #586 | 1 | c.1132C > T/p.(Gln378*) | 10 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #246 | 1 | c.1388G > A/p.(Trp463*) | 12 | Central rod | Trp | TGG | T | Transition |
| #362 | 1 | c.1793C > G/p.(Ser598*) | 15 | Central rod | Ser | TCA |
| Transversion |
| #461 | 1 | c.1777C > T/p.(Gln593*) | 15 | Central rod | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #307 | 1 | c.1928G > A/p.(Trp643*) | 16 | Central rod | Trp | TGG | T | Transition |
| #619 | 1 | c.2032C > T/p.(Gln678*) | 17 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #288 | 1 | c.2270C > G/p.(Ser757*) | 18 | Central rod | Ser | TCA | T | Transversion |
| #132 | 1 | c.2317A > T/p.(Lys773*) | 19 | Central rod | Lys | AAG |
| Transversion |
| #110/#725/#824 | 3 | c.2407C > T/p.(Gln803*) | 20 | Central rod | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #326 | 1 | c.3151C > T/p.(Arg1051*) | 20 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #303 | 1 | c.2440G > T/p.(Glu814*) | 20 | Central rod | Glu | GAA |
| Transversion |
| #775 | 1 | c.2566C > T/p.(Gln856*) | 20 | Central rod | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #773 | 1 | c.2414C > G/p.(Ser805*) | 20 | Central rod | Ser | TCA | T | Transversion |
| #723 | 1 | c.2626G > T/p.(Glu876*) | 21 | Central rod | Glu | GAA |
| Transversion |
| #762/#695 | 2 | c.2991C > G/p.(Tyr997*) | 23 | Central rod | Tyr | TAC |
| Transversion |
| #394/#460 | 2 | c.3151C > T/p.(Arg1051*) | 23 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #717 | 1 | c.3136C > T/p.(Gln1046*) | 23 | Central rod | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #125 | 1 | c.3742C > T/p.(Gln1248*) | 27 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #686 | 1 | c.4108C > T/p.(Gln1370*) | 30 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #258 | 1 | c.4375C > T/p.(Arg1459*) | 32 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| DMD191 | 1 | c.4499C > A/p.(Ser1500*) | 32 | Central rod | Ser | TCA | T | Transversion |
| #675/#677 | 2 | c.4729C > T/p.(Arg1577*) | 34 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #603 | 1 | c.4820T > A/p.(Leu1607*) | 34 | Central rod | Leu | TTG | T | Transversion |
| #639 | 1 | c.5530C > T/p.(Arg1844*) | 39 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #649 | 1 | c.6254G > A/p.(Trp2085*) | 43 | Central rod | Trp | TGG | T | Transition |
| #710 | 1 | c.6715G > T/p.(Glu2239*) | 46 | Central rod | Glu | GAA |
| Transversion |
| #303/#338 | 2 | c.6973C > T/p.(Gln2325*) | 48 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #769 | 1 | c.7010T > G/p.(Leu2337*) | 48 | Central rod | Leu | TTA | T | Transversion |
| #774 | 1 | c.7657C > T/p.(Arg2553*) | 52 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #465 | 1 | c.7792C > T/p.(Gln2598*) | 53 | Central rod | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #508 | 1 | c.7750C > T/p.(Gln2584*) | 53 | Central rod | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #689 | 1 | c.8098A > T/p.(Lys2700*) | 55 | Central rod | Lys | AAG |
| Transversion |
| #285 | 1 | c.8608C > T/p.(Arg2870*) | 58 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #623 | 1 | c.8774G > A/p.(Trp2925*) | 59 | Central rod | Trp | TGG | T | Transition |
| #483 | 1 | c.8944C > T/p.(Arg2982*) | 60 | Central rod | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #295 | 1 | c.9337C > T/p.(Arg3113*) | 64 | Cysteine-rich | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #194 | 1 | c.9459T > A/p.(Cys3153*) | 65 | Cysteine-rich | Cys | TGT | TG | Transversion |
| #673 | 1 | c.9474T > G/p.(Tyr3158*) | 65 | Cysteine-rich | Tyr | TAT | TA | Transversion |
| #542/#495/#700 | 3 | c.9568C > T/p.(Arg3190*) | 66 | Cysteine-rich | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #617 | 1 | c.9802C > T/p.(Gln3268*) | 67 | Cysteine-rich | Gln | CAA |
| Transition |
| #196 | 1 | c.9928C > T/p.(Gln3310*) | 68 | Cysteine-rich | Gln | CAG |
| Transition |
| #469/#437/#753/#846 | 4 | c.10108C > T/p.(Arg3370*) | 70 | Cysteine-rich | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #250 | 1 | c.10141C > T/p.(Arg3381*) | 70 | Carboxy-terminal | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
| #854 | 1 | c.10171C > T/(p.Arg3391*) | 70 | Carboxy-terminal | Arg | CGA |
| Transition |
Lab, laboratory; Patients, number of non-related patients with the same nonsense; Nonsense variant (HGVS, c./p.), HGVS-nomenclature (https://varnomen.hgvs.org/); p, (protein); c, (coding DNA) (Dp427m, NM_004006.3); WT aa, Wild type amino acid; WT Codón, Wild type codon, in bold the base implicated in the substitution; Dys Domains, dystrophin domains; DNA subst mut, DNA substitution mutations.
FIGURE 3DMD spectrum mutations and small variants by effect. (A) The figure shows the DMD percentages of the different genetic alterations found in the Argentine cohort. (B) DMD percentages of the small variants by their effect found in the Argentine cohort.
FIGURE 4Exonic targets for Exon skipping. The figure shows the targets for exon skipping that could restore the reading frame of a subset of 112 patients carrying out-of-frame deletions in DMD. 14 mutations can be corrected by two different Exon Skipping strategies.
Meta-analysis of Latin America’s metrics for DMD available therapies.
| Country | Total/diagnosed cases | Employed techniques | AD | Exon 45 skipping (E45S) | Exon 51 skipping (E51S) | Exon 53 skipping (E53S) | Ataluren | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argentina | 371/359 | MLPA and | 6 years | 9/155 (5.8%) | 20/155 (12.9%) | 18/155 (11.6%) | 60/143 (42%) | Present work |
| Brazil | 177/177 | MLPA and | — | 19/103 (18.4%) | 11/103 (10.7%) | 13/103 (12.6%) | 22/52 (42.3%) |
|
| Peru | 40/21 | PCRm and MLPA | — | 4/17 (23.5%) | 3/17 (17.6%) | 2/17 (11.8%) | — |
|
| Colombia | 52/52 | MLPA and | 9 years | 1/28 (3.6%) | 2/28 (7.1%) | 0/28 (0%) | 6/11 (54.5%) |
|
| Costa Rica | 74/53 | PCRm and MLPA | 7.5 years | 7/45 (15.6%) | 8/45 (17.8%) | 1/45 (2.2%) | — | Thesis3 |
| Puerto Rico | 84/65 | MLPA | — | 1/56 (1.8%) | 9/56 (16.1%) | 5/56 (8.9%) | — |
|
| Mexico | 170/116 | MLPA, PM-MLPA, HRM and sanger seq | — | 11/86 (12,8%) | 11/86 (12,8%) | 11/86 (12,8%) | — |
|
| 63/52 | MLPA, NGS and sanger seq | — | — | — | — | 11/29 (37.9%) |
| |
| Spain | 284/284 | PCRm, MLPA and sanger seq | — | 11/131 (8.4%) | 16/131 (12.2%) | 8/131 (6.1%) | 49/97 (50.5%) |
|
| Italy | 1902/1902 | PCRm, Log-PCR, MLPA, NGS and sanger seq | — | 39/610 (6.4%) | 51/610 (8.4%) | 53/610 (8.7%) | 200/469 (42.6%) |
|
| Portugal | 312/284 | Southern blot, PCRm, MLPA and sanger seq | — | 0/11 (0%) | 1/11 (9.1%) | 0/11 (0%) | 5/25 (20%) |
|
| EUA | 933/933 | SCAIP, MLPA, sanger seq and cDNA seq | — | 53/426 (12.4%) | 70/426 (16.4%) | 50/426 (11.7%) | 226/400 (56.5%) |
|
Tslrotal of molecularly analyzed/diagnosed unrelated male patients, members of a family were counted as 1 case; AD: Mean age at diagnosis
Percentage of deletions amenable with exon skipping of exon 45, 51, and 53, respectively. Calculations were performed as follows: N° of unrelated patients amenable for each of the therapies/N° of unrelated patients carrying deletions
Percentage of DMD small variants candidates for Ataluren or premature stop codon read through. Calculations were performed considering: N° of unrelated patients carrying nonsense variants/N° of unrelated patients with sequence variants. N/A: Data not available.
Frequencies were determined on the basis of the patients reported on LOVD and linked to the manuscript.