Myofibrillar myopathy with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy 7:: corroboration and narrowing of the critical region on 10q22.3

被引:15
作者
Kuhl, Angelika [1 ]
Melberg, Atle [2 ]
Meinl, Edgar [1 ,3 ]
Nuernberg, Gudrun [4 ]
Nuernberg, Peter [4 ]
Kehrer-Sawatzki, Hildegard [5 ]
Jenne, Dieter E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Max Planck Inst Neurobiol, Dept Neuroimmunol, D-82152 Martinsried, Germany
[2] Univ Uppsala Hosp, Dept Neurosci, Uppsala, Sweden
[3] Univ Munich, Inst Clin Immunol, Munich, Germany
[4] Univ Cologne, Cologne Ctr Genom, Cologne, Germany
[5] Univ Ulm, Dept Human Genet, Ulm, Germany
关键词
arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy; dilated cardiomyopathy; desmin-related myopathy; genome-wide mapping; PPIF; ZASP;
D O I
10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201980
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Several years ago, autosomal dominant myofibrillar myopathy (MFM) in combination with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC7) was tentatively mapped to a 10.6-Mbp (million base pairs) region on chromosome 10q22.3 between D10S605 (78.9 Mbp) and D10S215 (89.5 Mbp) in a Swedish family assuming that ARVC7 was allelic with cardiomyopathy, dilated 1C (CMD1C). To date, neither the genetic defect in ARVC7 nor CMD1C has been reported. In a comprehensive follow-up study were-examined and confirmed the previous linkage data for ARVC7 using a high-density single nucleotide polymorphism marker panel from Affymetrix (Human Mapping 10K Array). No other regions with significant evidence for linkage were discovered. The critical interval was narrowed down to 4.27 Mbp between D10S1645 and D10S1786. This reduced the total number of candidate genes to 18 of which 17 (RAI17, PPIF, C100RF56, SFTPA1, SFTPA2, SFTPA1B, SFTPA2B, SFTPD, C100RF57, PLAC9, ANXA11, MAT1A, DYDC1, DYDC2, C100RF58, TSPAN14 and SH2D4B) are shared with the CMD1C region. No disease-causing mutation was found in their coding regions. Moreover, metavinculin (VCL) and ZASP/cypher (LDB3) proximal and distal to this linked region were excluded by sequence analysis. To search for submicroscopic and intragenic deletions by PCR, we generated hybrid cell lines carrying only the affected or normal chromosome 10 homolog. All sequence tagged sites and exons were present on both homologs. We speculate that regulatory mutations in 1 of the 18 genes from 10q22.3 are responsible for a heterogenous spectrum of clinically distinct myodegenerative disorders, affecting both skeletal and cardiac muscles to variable degrees.
引用
收藏
页码:367 / 373
页数:7
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]   GRR: graphical representation of relationship errors [J].
Abecasis, GR ;
Cherny, SS ;
Cookson, WOC ;
Cardon, LR .
BIOINFORMATICS, 2001, 17 (08) :742-743
[2]   A Cypher/ZASP mutation associated with dilated cardiomyopathy alters the binding affinity to protein kinase C [J].
Arimura, T ;
Hayashi, T ;
Terada, H ;
Lee, SY ;
Zhou, Q ;
Takahashi, M ;
Ueda, K ;
Nouchi, T ;
Hohda, S ;
Shibutani, M ;
Hirose, M ;
Chen, J ;
Park, JE ;
Yasunami, M ;
Hayashi, H ;
Kimura, A .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2004, 279 (08) :6746-6752
[3]   Construction of a high-resolution physical map of the chromosome 10q22-q23 dilated cardiomyopathy locus and analysis of candidate genes [J].
Bowles, KR ;
Abraham, SE ;
Brugada, R ;
Zintz, C ;
Comeaux, J ;
Sorajja, D ;
Tsubata, S ;
Li, H ;
Brandon, L ;
Gibbs, RA ;
Scherer, SE ;
Bowles, NE ;
Towbin, JA .
GENOMICS, 2000, 67 (02) :109-127
[4]   Gene mapping of familial autosomal dominant dilated cardiomyopathy to chromosome 1Oq21-23 [J].
Bowles, KR ;
Gajarski, R ;
Porter, P ;
Goytia, V ;
Bachinski, L ;
Roberts, R ;
Pignatelli, R ;
Towbin, JA .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 1996, 98 (06) :1355-1360
[5]   Genomic characterization of the human peptidyl-prolyl-cis-trans-isomerase, mitochondrial precursor gene: assessment of its role in familial dilated cardiomyopathy [J].
Bowles, KR ;
Zintz, C ;
Abraham, SE ;
Brandon, L ;
Bowles, NE ;
Towbin, JA .
HUMAN GENETICS, 1999, 105 (06) :582-586
[6]   The DNA sequence and comparative analysis of human chromosome 10 [J].
Deloukas, P ;
Earthrowl, ME ;
Grafham, DV ;
Rubenfield, M ;
French, L ;
Steward, CA ;
Sims, SK ;
Jones, MC ;
Searle, S ;
Scott, C ;
Howe, K ;
Hunt, SE ;
Andrews, TD ;
Gilbert, JGR ;
Swarbreck, D ;
Ashurst, JL ;
Taylor, A ;
Battles, J ;
Bird, CP ;
Ainscough, R ;
Almeida, JP ;
Ashwell, RIS ;
Ambrose, KD ;
Babbage, AK ;
Bagguley, CL ;
Bailey, J ;
Banerjee, R ;
Bates, K ;
Beasley, H ;
Bray-Allen, S ;
Brown, AJ ;
Brown, JY ;
Burford, DC ;
Burrill, W ;
Burton, J ;
Cahill, P ;
Camire, D ;
Carter, NP ;
Chapman, JC ;
Clark, SY ;
Clarke, G ;
Clee, CM ;
Clegg, S ;
Corby, N ;
Coulson, A ;
Dhami, P ;
Dutta, I ;
Dunn, M ;
Faulkner, L ;
Frankish, A .
NATURE, 2004, 429 (6990) :375-381
[7]  
Kruglyak L, 1996, AM J HUM GENET, V58, P1347
[8]  
MCKENNA WJ, 1994, BRIT HEART J, V71, P215
[9]  
Melberg A, 1999, ANN NEUROL, V46, P684, DOI 10.1002/1531-8249(199911)46:5<684::AID-ANA2>3.0.CO
[10]  
2-#