ISPD gene mutations are a common cause of congenital and limb-girdle muscular dystrophies

Sebahattin Çirak(University College London), A. Reghan Foley(University College London), Ralf Herrmann(Zentrum für Kinderheilkunde), Tobias Willer(University of Iowa), Shu Yau(Guy's Hospital), Elizabeth Stevens(University College London), Silvia Torelli(University College London), Lina Brodd(Guy's Hospital), Alisa Kamynina(University College London), Petr Vondráček(University Hospital Brno), Helen Roper(Heartlands Hospital), Cheryl Longman(Stobhill Hospital), Rudolf Korinthenberg(University of Freiburg), Gianni Marrosu(University of Cagliari), Peter Nürnberg(University of Cologne), Daniel E. Michele(University of Michigan), Vincent Plagnol(University College London), Matt Hurles(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Steven A. Moore(University of Iowa), Caroline A. Sewry(Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital), Kevin P. Campbell(University of Iowa), Thomas Voït(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Francesco Muntoni(University College London)
Brain
January 1, 2013
Cited by 105Open Access
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Abstract

Dystroglycanopathies are a clinically and genetically diverse group of recessively inherited conditions ranging from the most severe of the congenital muscular dystrophies, Walker-Warburg syndrome, to mild forms of adult-onset limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. Their hallmark is a reduction in the functional glycosylation of α-dystroglycan, which can be detected in muscle biopsies. An important part of this glycosylation is a unique O-mannosylation, essential for the interaction of α-dystroglycan with extracellular matrix proteins such as laminin-α2. Mutations in eight genes coding for proteins in the glycosylation pathway are responsible for ∼50% of dystroglycanopathy cases. Despite multiple efforts using traditional positional cloning, the causative genes for unsolved dystroglycanopathy cases have escaped discovery for several years. In a recent collaborative study, we discovered that loss-of-function recessive mutations in a novel gene, called isoprenoid synthase domain containing (ISPD), are a relatively common cause of Walker-Warburg syndrome. In this article, we report the involvement of the ISPD gene in milder dystroglycanopathy phenotypes ranging from congenital muscular dystrophy to limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and identified allelic ISPD variants in nine cases belonging to seven families. In two ambulant cases, there was evidence of structural brain involvement, whereas in seven, the clinical manifestation was restricted to a dystrophic skeletal muscle phenotype. Although the function of ISPD in mammals is not yet known, mutations in this gene clearly lead to a reduction in the functional glycosylation of α-dystroglycan, which not only causes the severe Walker-Warburg syndrome but is also a common cause of the milder forms of dystroglycanopathy.


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