Molecular and Genetic Study of Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy 2D in Patient Cohorts with Various Forms of Progressive Muscular Dystrophies


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Abstract

Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy 2D (LGMD 2D) is the most common form of sarcoglycanopathies, which include autosomal recessive LGMDs caused by various molecular defects in the genes encoding sarcoglycan family proteins (α, β, γ, and δ). LGMD 2D occurs owing to mutations in the SGCA gene that encodes α-sarcoglycan. In general, it is difficult to distinguish clinical features of LGMD 2D from ones of both other pseudohypertrophic LGMDs and Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy (D/BMD). In the present paper, the study of LGMD 2D based on the analysis of the frequency of recurrent SGCA gene variants (c.229C>T, c.271G>A, and c.850C>T) in three patient cohorts with progressive muscular dystrophy manifesting itself after a normal motor development period was conducted. No LGMD 2D patients were found within the cohort of patients with clinical diagnosis of Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy. The percentage of LGMD 2D patients was no less than 1.9% in the patient cohort with clinical diagnosis of LGMD, while LGMD 2D accounted for no less than 0.6% in the patient cohort with clinical diagnosis of D/BMD. It is noteworthy that, in these two cohorts, the most common SGCA variant in the world, c.229C>T, and a variant found in only one Italian family, c.271G>A, account for almost the same number of affected chromosomes. Therefore, LGMD 2D patients from Russia differ from LGMD 2D patients from all over the world in the presence of two major variants of this gene (c.229C>T and c.271G>A). The information value of the test system for the detection of three SGCA gene variants (the capability to reveal at least one mutant allele) was on average rather high (70% in the group of patients with LGMD and 50% in the group of patients with D/BMD); therefore this test system could be recommended as the primary step of LGMD 2D molecular diagnostics in patients with the corresponding clinical features.

About the authors

M. V. Bulakh

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Author for correspondence.
Email: mariya.bulakh@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522

N. M. Galeeva

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Email: apol@dnalab.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522

D. A. Polyakova

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Email: apol@dnalab.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522

O. P. Ryzhkova

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Email: apol@dnalab.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522

E. L. Dadali

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Email: apol@dnalab.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522

A. V. Polyakov

Research Centre for Medical Genetics

Author for correspondence.
Email: apol@dnalab.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 115522


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