4.7 Article

Recessive truncating titin gene, TTN, mutations presenting as centronuclear myopathy

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 14, Pages 1205-1214

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182a6ca62

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dubai-Harvard Foundation for Medical Research postdoctoral fellowship
  2. Schlumberger Foundation Faculty for the Future grant
  3. NIH [R01 AR044345, R01 AR05387]
  4. Muscular Dystrophy Association (United States) [MDA201302, MDA186985, K08 AR59750, L40 AR057721]
  5. Agence Nationale Recherche [ANR-11-BSV1-026]
  6. Myotubular Trust
  7. Joshua Frase Foundation
  8. Lee and Penny Anderson Family Foundation

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Objective: To identify causative genes for centronuclear myopathies (CNM), a heterogeneous group of rare inherited muscle disorders that often present in infancy or early life with weakness and hypotonia, using next-generation sequencing of whole exomes and genomes. Methods: Whole-exome or -genome sequencing was performed in a cohort of 29 unrelated patients with clinicopathologic diagnoses of CNM or related myopathy depleted for cases with mutations of MTM1, DNM2, and BIN1. Immunofluorescence analyses on muscle biopsies, splicing assays, and gel electrophoresis of patient muscle proteins were performed to determine the molecular consequences of mutations of interest. Results: Autosomal recessive compound heterozygous truncating mutations of the titin gene, TTN, were identified in 5 individuals. Biochemical analyses demonstrated increased titin degradation and truncated titin proteins in patient muscles, establishing the impact of the mutations. Conclusions: Our study identifies truncating TTN mutations as a cause of congenital myopathy that is reported as CNM. Unlike the classic CNM genes that are all involved in excitation-contraction coupling at the triad, TTN encodes the giant sarcomeric protein titin, which forms a myofibrillar backbone for the components of the contractile machinery. This study expands the phenotypic spectrum associated with TTN mutations and indicates that TTN mutation analysis should be considered in cases of possible CNM without mutations in the classic CNM genes.

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