
A case of pseudodominant inheritance of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy caused by mutations in the CAPN3 gene
Author(s) -
И. В. Шаркова,
Шаркова Инна Валентиновна,
Maria Bulakh,
Булах Мария Васильевна,
Л. А. Бессонова,
Бессонова Людмила Александровна,
О. А. Щагина,
Щагина Ольга Анатольевна,
Elena L. Dadaly,
Дадали Елена Леонидовна
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
annaly kliničeskoj i èksperimentalʹnoj nevrologii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.118
H-Index - 2
eISSN - 2409-2533
pISSN - 2075-5473
DOI - 10.54101/acen.2021.3.10
Subject(s) - limb girdle muscular dystrophy , genetics , proband , muscular dystrophy , compound heterozygosity , mutation , biology , daughter , sanger sequencing , gene , evolutionary biology
. Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) includes more than 30 forms caused by mutations in genes located on autosomes. The most common form is calpain-3-related LGMD, with autosomal recessive inheritance pattern (OMIM 253600). An autosomal dominant form of LGMD (OMIM 618129) caused by c.643_663del heterozygous mutation in the CAPN3 gene is also supposed to exist.
This article describes a family case of LGMD caused by mutations in the CAPN3 gene with pseudodominant inheritance.
Materials and methods. Two patients with LGMD were studied: a 59-year-old woman and her 38-year-old daughter. Clinical, genealogical and molecular genetics methods were used: limb girdle muscular dystrophy MPS panel, Sanger sequencing of DNA of the proband, her affected daughter, and six first- and second-degree relatives across four generations.
Results. It was found that identical variants of the nucleotide sequence, c.598_612del and c.1746-20CG, identified in the CAPN3 gene of the proband and her daughter, are in the trans position (compound heterozygous state), causing autosomal recessive calpain-3-related LGMD. This is an example of an incredibly rare pseudodominant inheritance of an autosomal recessive disease, established through indirect evidence that the probands husband is a heterozygous carrier of a nucleotide substitution in the CAPN3 gene.
Conclusion. It is crucial to examine the marriage partner for heterozygous carrier status of a gene mutation responsible for the disease in family planning and when clarifying the childs prognosis for a patient with an autosomal recessive disease. Considering the existence of a late-onset (after 30 years) LGMD phenotype associated with the CAPN3 gene, differential diagnosis should begin with testing this gene in families with late disease onset.