4.7 Article

5 ' UTR CGG repeat expansion in GIPC1 is associated with oculopharyngodistal myopathy

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages 601-614

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa388

Keywords

oculopharyngodistal myopathy; long-read sequencing; GIPC1; CGG repeat expansion; muscle imaging

Funding

  1. National Key Research Program of China [2017YFC0907503]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [KFJ-STS-QYZD-126]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81801242]
  4. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [17DZ2270800, 18140900303, 19ZR1445300, 20S31904200]
  5. Major Industrial Technology Projects of Shanghai Minhang District [2018MH202]
  6. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project [2018SHZDZX03]
  7. ZJLab

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A genetic study in a Chinese cohort of oculopharyngodistal myopathy patients revealed an abnormal CGG repeat expansion in the GIPC1 gene in over half of the cases. The number of repeats in affected individuals was slightly correlated with age of onset, with both expansion and retraction observed during transmission. This highlights the essential role of non-coding CGG repeat expansion in the pathogenesis of the disease.
Oculopharyngodistal myopathy is a late-onset degenerative muscle disorder characterized by ptosis and weakness of the facial, pharyngeal, and distal limb muscles. A recent report suggested a non-coding trinucleotide repeat expansion in LRP12 to be associated with the disease. Here we report a genetic study in a Chinese cohort of 41 patients with the clinical diagnosis of oculopharyngodistal myopathy (21 cases from seven families and 20 sporadic cases). In a large family with 12 affected individuals, combined haplotype and linkage analysis revealed a maximum two-point logarithm of the odds (LOD) score of 3.3 in chromosomal region chr19p13.11-p13.2 and narrowed the candidate region to an interval of 4.5 Mb. Using a comprehensive strategy combining whole-exome sequencing, long-read sequencing, repeat-primed polymerase chain reaction and GC-rich polymerase chain reaction, we identified an abnormal CGG repeat expansion in the 5' UTR of the GIPC1 gene that co-segregated with disease. Overall, the repeat expansion in GIPC1 was identified in 51.9% independent pedigrees (4/7 families and 10/20 sporadic cases), while the repeat expansion in LRP12 was only identified in one sporadic case (3.7%) in our cohort. The number of CGG repeats was 530 in controls but 460 in affected individuals. There was a slight correlation between repeat size and the age at onset. Both repeat expansion and retraction were observed during transmission but somatic instability was not evident. These results further support that non-coding CGG repeat expansion plays an essential role in the pathogenesis of oculopharyngodistal myopathy.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available