Artículos de revistas
Insights from genotype-phenotype correlations by novel SPEG mutations causing centronuclear myopathy
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Neuromuscular Disorders 27 (2017) 836–842
10.1016/j.nmd.2017.05.014
Autor
Wang, Haicui
Castiglioni, Claudia
Bayram, Ayse Kacar
Fattori, Fabiana
Pekuz, Serdar
Araneda, Diego
Per, Huseyin
Erazo, Ricardo
Gumus, Hakan
Zorludemir, Suzan
Becker, Kerstin
Ortega, Ximena
Bevilacqua, Jorge
Bertini, Enrico
Cirak, Sebahattin
Institución
Resumen
Centronuclear myopathies (CNM) are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of congenital myopathies, defined histologically by increased number of fibres with centrally located nuclei, and type I fibre predominance in muscle biopsy. Myotubular myopathy, the X-linked form of CNM caused by mutations in the phosphoinositide phosphatase MTM1, is histologically characteristic since muscle fibres resemble myotubes.
Here we present two unrelated patients with CNM and typical myotubular fibres in the muscle biopsy caused by mutations in striated muscle preferentially expressed protein kinase (SPEG). Next generation sequencing revealed novel biallelic homozygous mutations in SPEG in both cases. Patient 1 showed the c.1627_1628insA (p.Thr544Aspfs*48) mutation and patient 2 the c.9586C>T (p.Arg3196*) mutation. The clinical phenotype was distinctive in the two patients since patient 2 developed a dilated cardiomyopathy with milder myopathy features, while patient 1 showed only myopathic features without cardiac involvement. These findings expand the genotype phenotype correlations after the initial report. Additionally, we describe whole body muscle MRI of patient 2 and we argue on the different SPEG isoforms in skeletal muscle and heart as the possible explanation leading to variable phenotypes of SPEG mutations.