Distal spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy caused by dynactin mutation

Imke Puls(National Institutes of Health), Shin J. Oh(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Charlotte J. Sumner(National Institutes of Health), Karen E. Wallace(University of Pennsylvania), Mary Kay Floeter(National Institutes of Health), Eric Mann(National Institutes of Health), William R. Kennedy(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Gwen Wendelschafer‐Crabb(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Alexander O. Vortmeyer(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), Richard E. Powers(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Kimberly A. Finnegan(National Institutes of Health), Erika L.F. Holzbaur(University of Pennsylvania), Kenneth H. Fischbeck(National Institutes of Health), Christy L. Ludlow(National Institutes of Health)
Annals of Neurology
April 25, 2005
Cited by 200Open Access
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Abstract

Impaired axonal transport has been postulated to play a role in the pathophysiology of multiple neurodegenerative disorders. In this report, we describe the results of clinical and neuropathological studies in a family with an inherited form of motor neuron disease caused by mutation in the p150Glued subunit of dynactin, a microtubule motor protein essential for retrograde axonal transport. Affected family members had a distinct clinical phenotype characterized by early bilateral vocal fold paralysis affecting the adductor and abductor laryngeal muscles. They later experienced weakness and atrophy in the face, hands, and distal legs. The extremity involvement was greater in the hands than in the legs, and it had a particular predilection for the thenar muscles. No clinical or electrophysiological sensory abnormality existed; however, skin biopsy results showed morphological abnormalities of epidermal nerve fibers. An autopsy study of one patient showed motor neuron degeneration and axonal loss in the ventral horn of the spinal cord and hypoglossal nucleus of the medulla. Immunohistochemistry showed abnormal inclusions of dynactin and dynein in motor neurons. This mutation of dynactin, a ubiquitously expressed protein, causes a unique pattern of motor neuron degeneration that is associated with the accumulation of dynein and dynactin in neuronal inclusions.


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