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    Neurology. 2010 Aug 10;75(6):539-46. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181ec800c.

    Dominant spinal muscular atrophy with lower extremity predominance: linkage to 14q32.

    Source

    Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    Spinal muscular atrophies (SMAs) are hereditary disorders characterized by weakness from degeneration of spinal motor neurons. Although most SMA cases with proximal weakness are recessively inherited, rare families with dominant inheritance have been reported. We aimed to clinically, pathologically, and genetically characterize a large North American family with an autosomal dominant proximal SMA.

    METHODS:

    Affected family members underwent clinical and electrophysiologic evaluation. Twenty family members were genotyped on high-density genome-wide SNP arrays and linkage analysis was performed.

    RESULTS:

    Ten affected individuals (ages 7-58 years) showed prominent quadriceps atrophy, moderate to severe weakness of quadriceps and hip abductors, and milder degrees of weakness in other leg muscles. Upper extremity strength and sensation was normal. Leg weakness was evident from early childhood and was static or very slowly progressive. Electrophysiology and muscle biopsies were consistent with chronic denervation. SNP-based linkage analysis showed a maximum 2-point lod score of 5.10 (theta = 0.00) at rs17679127 on 14q32. A disease-associated haplotype spanning from 114 cM to the 14q telomere was identified. A single recombination narrowed the minimal genomic interval to Chr14: 100,220,765-106,368,585. No segregating copy number variations were found within the disease interval.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    We describe a family with an early onset, autosomal dominant, proximal SMA with a distinctive phenotype: symptoms are limited to the legs and there is notable selectivity for the quadriceps. We demonstrate linkage to a 6.1-Mb interval on 14q32 and propose calling this disorder spinal muscular atrophy-lower extremity, dominant.

    PMID:
    20697106
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2918478
    Free PMC Article

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