Dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR, CACNA1S) congenital myopathy

Archive ouverte

Schartner, Vanessa | Romero, Norma | Donkervoort, Sandra | Treves, Susan | Munot, Pinki | Pierson, Tyler | Dabaj, Ivana | Malfatti, Edoardo | Zaharieva, Irina | Zorzato, Francesco | Abath Neto, Osario | Brochier, Guy | Lornage, Xavière | Eymard, Bruno | Taratuto, Ana | Böhm, Johann | Gonorazky, Hernan | Ramos-Platt, Leigh | Feng, Lucy | Phadke, Rahul | Bharucha-Goebel, Diana | Sumner, Charlotte | Bui, Mai | Lacene, Emmanuelle | Beuvin, Maud | Labasse, Clémence | Dondaine, Nicolas | Schneider, Raphael | Thompson, Julie, D. | Boland, Anne | Deleuze, Jean-François | Matthews, Emma | Pakleza, Aleksandra | Sewry, Caroline | Biancalana, Valérie | Quijano-Roy, Susana | Muntoni, Francesco | Fardeau, Michel | Bönnemann, Carsten | Laporte, Jocelyn

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

Muscle contraction upon nerve stimulation relies on excitation-contraction coupling (ECC) to promote the rapid and generalized release of calcium within myofibers. In skeletal muscle, ECC is performed by the direct coupling of a voltage-gated L-type Ca2+ channel (dihydropyridine receptor; DHPR) located on the T-tubule with a Ca2+ release channel (ryanodine receptor; RYR1) on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) component of the triad. Here, we characterize a novel class of congenital myopathy at the morphological, molecular, and functional levels. We describe a cohort of 11 patients from 7 families presenting with perinatal hypotonia, severe axial and generalized weakness. Ophthalmoplegia is present in four patients. The analysis of muscle biopsies demonstrated a characteristic intermyofibrillar network due to SR dilatation, internal nuclei, and areas of myofibrillar disorganization in some samples. Exome sequencing revealed ten recessive or dominant mutations in CACNA1S (Cav1.1), the pore-forming subunit of DHPR in skeletal muscle. Both recessive and dominant mutations correlated with a consistent phenotype, a decrease in protein level, and with a major impairment of Ca2+ release induced by depolarization in cultured myotubes. While dominant CACNA1S mutations were previously linked to malignant hyperthermia susceptibility or hypokalemic periodic paralysis, our findings strengthen the importance of DHPR for perinatal muscle function in human. These data also highlight CACNA1S and ECC as therapeutic targets for the development of treatments that may be facilitated by the previous knowledge accumulated on DHPR.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Loss of Sarcomeric Scaffolding as a Common Baseline Histopathologic Lesion in Titin-Related Myopathies

Archive ouverte | Ávila-Polo, Rainiero | CCSD

International audience. Titin-related myopathies are heterogeneous clinical conditions associated with mutations in TTN. To define their histopathologic boundaries and try to overcome the difficulty in assessing the...

Specific heterozygous frameshift variants in hnRNPA2B1 cause early-onset oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy

Archive ouverte | Kim, Hong Joo | CCSD

Summary RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are essential for post-transcriptional regulation and processing of RNAs. Pathogenic missense variants in RBPs underlie a spectrum of disease phenotypes, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,...

Recessive MYPN mutations cause cap myopathy with occasional nemaline rods

Archive ouverte | Lornage, Xavière | CCSD

Congenital myopathies are phenotypically and genetically heterogeneous. We describe homozygous truncating mutations in MYPN in 2 unrelated families with a slowly progressive congenital cap myopathy. MYPN encodes the Z-line protein...

Chargement des enrichissements...