4.6 Article

Clinical and Neuroimaging Features in Charcot-Marie-Tooth Patients with GNB4 Mutations

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life11060494

Keywords

Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease; CMTDIF; GNB4; peripheral neuropathy; neuroimaging

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation [2016R1A5A2007009, 2019R1A2C1087547, 2020M3H4A1A03084600, 2021R1A4A2001389]
  2. Korean Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea [HI14C3484, HI20C0039]

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Through studying Korean CMT families, it was found that mutations in the GNB4 gene can cause not only intermediate type CMT, but also demyelinating-type neuropathy. Patients with the p.Lys89Glu mutation exhibited distinct demyelinating pathologic features and abnormalities in muscle MRI. Therefore, these findings are helpful for the differential diagnosis of CMT patients with unknown GNB4 variants.
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is the most common inherited peripheral neuropathy. Mutations in the GNB4 gene cause dominant intermediate CMT type F (CMTDIF). The aim of this study is to investigate phenotypic heterogeneities and characteristics of CMT patients with GNB4 mutations. We enrolled 1143 Korean CMT families and excluded 344 families with a PMP22 duplication. We further analyzed the 799 remaining families to find their GNB4 mutations using whole-exome sequencing (WES). We identified two mutations (p.Gly77Arg and p.Lys89Glu) in three families, among which a heterozygous p.Gly77Arg mutation was novel. In addition, a significant uncertain variant (p.Thr177Asn) was observed in one family. The frequency of the GNB4 mutation in the Korean population is 0.38% in PMP22 duplication-negative families. All three families showed de novo mutation. Electrophysiological findings regarding the p.Lys89Glu mutation showed that the motor nerve conduction velocity (MNCV) of the median nerve was markedly reduced, indicating demyelinating neuropathy, and sural nerve biopsy revealed severe loss of myelinated axons with onion bulb formation. Lower extremity Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) demonstrated relatively more severe intramuscular fat infiltrations in demyelinating type (p.Lys89Glu mutation) patients compared to intermediate type (p.Gly77Arg mutation) patients. The anterolateral and superficial posterior compartment muscles of the distal calf were preferentially affected in demyelinating type patients. Therefore, it seems that the investigated GNB4 mutations do cause not only the known intermediate type but also demyelinating-type neuropathy. We first presented three Korean families with GNB4 mutations and found phenotypic heterogeneities of both intermediate and demyelinating neuropathy. We suggest that those findings are useful for the differential diagnosis of CMT patients with unknown GNB4 variants.

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