4.6 Article

Case report: Clinical and molecular characterization of two siblings affected by Brody myopathy

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1170071

Keywords

Brody myopathy; SERCA1; WES; neuromuscular disorder

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Exercise-induced muscle stiffness is the main symptom of Brody disease, which is a recessive genetic muscle disorder caused by ATP2A1 gene mutations. The knowledge about the disease's natural history, genotype-phenotype correlations, and treatment effects is still incomplete, leading to underdiagnosis. This study reports the clinical and genetic characteristics of two siblings with childhood-onset exercise-induced muscle stiffness and identified two ATP2A1 mutations associated with the disease.
Exercise-induced muscle stiffness is the hallmark of Brody disease, an autosomal recessive myopathy due to biallelic pathogenic variants in ATP2A1, encoding the sarcoplasmic/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase SERCA1. About 40 patients have been reported so far. Our knowledge about the natural history of this disorder, genotype-phenotype correlations and the effect of symptomatic treatment is partial. This results in incomplete recognition and underdiagnosis of the disease. Here, we report the clinical, instrumental, and molecular features of two siblings presenting childhood-onset exercise-induced muscle stiffness without pain. Both the probands display difficulty in climbing stairs and running, frequent falls, delayed muscle relaxation after exertion. Cold temperatures worsen these symptoms. No myotonic discharges were observed at electromyography. Whole Exome Sequencing analysis in the probands revealed the presence of two ATP2A1 variants: the previously reported frameshift microdeletion c.2464delC and the likely pathogenic novel splice-site variant c.324 + 1G > A, whose detrimental effect was demonstrated in ATP2A1 transcript analysis. The bi-allelic inheritance was verified by Sanger sequencing in the unaffected parents. This study expands the molecular defects associated with Brody myopathy.

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