The pathogenesis of ACTA1-related congenital fiber type disproportion
β Scribed by Nigel F. Clarke; Biljana Ilkovski; Sandra Cooper; Valentina A. Valova; Phillip J. Robinson; Ikuya Nonaka; Juan-Juan Feng; Steven Marston; Kathryn North
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 957 KB
- Volume
- 61
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-5134
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Objective
Mutations in ACTA1 have been associated with a variety of changes in muscle histology that likely result from fundamental differences in the way that ACTA1 mutations disrupt muscle function. Recently, we reported three patients with congenital fiber type disproportion (CFTD) caused by novel heterozygous missense mutations in ACTA1 (D292V, L221P, P332S) with marked type 1 fiber hypotrophy as the only pathological finding on muscle biopsy. We have investigated the basis for the histological differences between these CFTD patients and patients with ACTA1 nemaline myopathy (NM).
Methods and Results
Mass spectrometry and twoβdimensional gel electrophoresis demonstrate that mutant actin accounts for 25 and 50% of Ξ±βskeletal actin in the skeletal muscle of patients with the P332S and D292V mutations, respectively, consistent with a dominantβnegative disease mechanism. In vitro motility studies indicate that abnormal interactions between actin and tropomyosin are the likely principal cause of muscle weakness for D292V, with tropomyosin stabilized in the βswitched offβ position. Both the D292V and P322S CFTD mutations are associated with normal sarcomeric structure on electron microscopy, which is atypical for severe NM. In contrast, we found no clear difference between ACTA1 mutations associated with NM and CFTD in tendency to polymerize or aggregate in C2C12 expression models.
Interpretation
These data suggest that ACTA1 CFTD mutations cause weakness by disrupting sarcomere function rather than structure. We raise the possibility that the presence or absence of structural disorganization when mutant actin incorporates into sarcomeres may be an important determinant of whether the histological patterns of CFTD or NM develop in ACTA1 myopathy. Ann Neurol 2007
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The main histological abnormality in congenital fiber type disproportion (CFTD) is hypotrophy of type 1 (slow twitch) fibers compared to type 2 (fast twitch) fibers. To investigate whether mutations in RYR1 are a cause of CFTD we sequenced RYR1 in seven CFTD families in whom the other known causes o
Congenital fiber type disproportion (CFTD) is a rare congenital myopathy characterized by hypotonia and generalized muscle weakness. Pathologic diagnosis of CFTD is based on the presence of type 1 fiber hypotrophy of at least 12% in the absence of other notable pathological findings. Mutations of th