Variable disease severity in Saudi Arabian and Sudanese families with c.3924 + 2 T > C mutation of LAMA2
Variable disease severity in Saudi Arabian and Sudanese families with c.3924 + 2 T > C mutation of LAMA2
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Date
2015-11-25
Authors
Mukhtar, Moawia M.
Blasi, Claudia Di
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
university of khartoum
Abstract
Background: Congenital muscular dystrophy type 1A is caused by mutations in the LAMA2 gene that encodes the
laminin a2 chain, a component of the skeletal muscle extracellular matrix protein laminin-211. The clinical
spectrum of the disease is more heterogeneous than previously thought, particularly in terms of motor
achievement and disease progression. We investigated clinical findings and performed molecular genetic analysis
in 3 families from Saudi Arabia and 1 from Sudan in whom congenital muscular dystrophy 1A was suspected
based on homozygosity mapping and laminin a2 chain deficiency.
Methods: We investigated 9 affected individuals from 1 Sudanese and 3 Saudi families in whom MDC1A was
suggested by clinical, neuroimaging and/or pathological findings and by homozygosity mapping at the LAMA2
locus. Morphological and immunohistochemical analysis were performed in 3 patients from the 3 Saudi families.
SSCP analysis, DNA sequencing and microsatellite analysis were carried out in the 4 index cases.
Results: A previously described mutation in the LAMA2 gene, a homozygous T > C substitution at position +2 of
the consensus donor splice site of exon 26, was found in the 4 index patients. Clinical evaluation of 9 patients
from the 4 families revealed variable disease severity particularly as regards motor achievement and disease
progression. Microsatellite analysis showed an identical mutation-associated haplotype in the 4 index cases
indicating a founder effect of the mutation in all 4 families.
Conclusions: Our data provide further evidence that the clinical spectrum of MDC1A due to a single mutation is
heterogeneous, particularly in terms of motor achievement and disease progression, making it difficult to give a
reliable prognosis even in patients with identical LAMA2-associated haplotype. The c.3924 + 2 T > C mutation to
date has been found only in patients originating from the Middle East or Sudan; therefore laminin 2 chain
deficiency in patients from those regions should initially prompt a search for this mutation.
Description
Keywords
MDC1A, LAMA2, gene, Laminin α2 chain, Merosin