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    Ann Neurol. 2007 Apr;61(4):340-51.

    C-terminal titin deletions cause a novel early-onset myopathy with fatal cardiomyopathy.

    Source

    Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Médicale U582, Institut de Myologie, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, France.

    Erratum in

    • Ann Neurol. 2012 May;71(5):728.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    The giant protein titin is essential for striated muscle development, structure, and elasticity. All titin mutations reported to date cause late-onset, dominant disorders involving either skeletal muscle or the heart. Our aim was to delineate the phenotype and determine the genetic defects in two consanguineous families with an early-onset, recessive muscle and cardiac disorder.

    METHODS:

    Clinical and myopathological reevaluation of the five affected children, positional cloning, immunofluorescence, and Western blot studies were performed.

    RESULTS:

    All children presented with congenital muscle weakness and childhood-onset fatal dilated cardiomyopathy. Skeletal muscle biopsies showed minicores, centrally located nuclei, and/or dystrophic lesions. In each family, we identified a homozygous titin deletion in exons encoding the C-terminal M-line region. Both deletions cause a frameshift downstream of the titin kinase domain and protein truncation. Immunofluorescence confirmed that truncated titins lacking the C-terminal end were incorporated into sarcomeres. Calpain 3 was secondarily depleted.

    INTERPRETATION:

    M-line titin homozygous truncations cause the first congenital and purely recessive titinopathy, and the first to involve both cardiac and skeletal muscle. These results expand the spectrum of early-onset myopathies and suggest that titin segments downstream of the kinase domain are dispensable for skeletal and cardiac muscle development, but are crucial for maintaining sarcomere integrity.

    PMID:
    17444505
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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