Clinical and genetic findings in a large cohort of patients with ryanodine receptor 1 gene-associated myopathies

Andrea Klein(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Suzanne Lillis(Guy's Hospital), Iulia Munteanu(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Mariacristina Scoto(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Haiyan Zhou(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Rosaline C. M. Quinlivan(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Volker Straub(Centre for Life), Adnan Y. Manzur(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Helen Roper(Heartlands Hospital), Pierre‐Yves Jeannet(University Hospital of Lausanne), Wojtek Rakowicz(Imperial College London), David Hilton Jones(John Radcliffe Hospital), Uffe Birk Jensen(Aarhus University Hospital), Elizabeth Wraige(St Thomas' Hospital), Natalie Trump(Guy's Hospital), Ulrike Schara, Hanns Lochmüller(Centre for Life), Anna Sárközy(Centre for Life), Helen Kingston(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre), Fiona Norwood(King's College Hospital), Maxwell S. Damian(Addenbrooke's Hospital), Janbernd Kirschner(University Medical Center Freiburg), Cheryl Longman, Mark Roberts(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Michaela Auer‐Grumbach(Medical University of Graz), Imelda Hughes(Royal Manchester Children's Hospital), Kate Bushby(Centre for Life), Caroline A. Sewry(Great Ormond Street Hospital), S. Robb(Great Ormond Street Hospital), Stephen Abbs(Guy's Hospital), Heinz Jungbluth(St Thomas' Hospital), Francesco Muntoni(Great Ormond Street Hospital)
Human Mutation
February 21, 2012
Cited by 167

Abstract

Ryanodine receptor 1 (RYR1) mutations are a common cause of congenital myopathies associated with both dominant and recessive inheritance. Histopathological findings frequently feature central cores or multi-minicores, more rarely, type 1 predominance/uniformity, fiber-type disproportion, increased internal nucleation, and fatty and connective tissue. We describe 71 families, 35 associated with dominant RYR1 mutations and 36 with recessive inheritance. Five of the dominant mutations and 35 of the 55 recessive mutations have not been previously reported. Dominant mutations, typically missense, were frequently located in recognized mutational hotspot regions, while recessive mutations were distributed throughout the entire coding sequence. Recessive mutations included nonsense and splice mutations expected to result in reduced RyR1 protein. There was wide clinical variability. As a group, dominant mutations were associated with milder phenotypes; patients with recessive inheritance had earlier onset, more weakness, and functional limitations. Extraocular and bulbar muscle involvement was almost exclusively observed in the recessive group. In conclusion, our study reports a large number of novel RYR1 mutations and indicates that recessive variants are at least as frequent as the dominant ones. Assigning pathogenicity to novel mutations is often difficult, and interpretation of genetic results in the context of clinical, histological, and muscle magnetic resonance imaging findings is essential.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis