Patients with ACTA1 mutations causing congenital myopathies
The article catalogs 177 disease-causing ACTA1 mutations associated with severe congenital myopathies and introduces a locus-specific database to aid molecular diagnosis.
The ACTA1 gene encodes skeletal muscle alpha-actin, which is the predominant actin isoform in the sarcomeric thin filaments of adult skeletal muscle, and essential, along with myosin, for muscle contraction. ACTA1 disease-causing mutations were first described in 1999, when a total of 15 mutations were known. In this article we describe 177 different disease-causing ACTA1 mutations, including 85 that have not been described before. ACTA1 mutations result in five overlapping congenital myopathies: nemaline myopathy; intranuclear rod myopathy; actin filament aggregate myopathy; congenital fiber type disproportion; and myopathy with core-like areas. Mixtures of these histopathological phenotypes may be seen in a single biopsy from one patient. Irrespective of the histopathology, the disease is frequently clinically severe, with many patients dying within the first year of life. Most mutations are dominant and most patients have de novo mutations not present in the peripheral blood DNA of either parent. Only 10% of mutations are recessive and they are genetic or functional null mutations. To aid molecular diagnosis and establishing genotype-phenotype correlations, we have developed a locus-specific database for ACTA1 variations (http://waimr.uwa.edu.au).
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Nigel G. Laing
Danielle E. Dye
Carina Wallgren‐Pettersson
Human Mutation
Harvard University
Inserm
University of Helsinki
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Laing et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d7268ccd480cb7e5f50c58 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.21059