New FKRP mutations causing congenital muscular dystrophy associated with mental retardation and central nervous system abnormalities. Identification of a founder mutation in Tunisian families
Author: Louhichi N, Triki C, Quijano Roy S, Richard P, Makri S, Méziou M, Estournet B, Mrad S, Romero NB, Ayadi H, Guicheney P, Fakhfakh F.
Source:
Neurogenetics, 5(1), 27-34.
The congenital muscular dystrophies (CMD) constitute a clinically and genetically
heterogeneous group of autosomal recessive myopathies. Patients show congenital
hypotonia, muscle weakness, and dystrophic changes on muscle biopsy. Mutations in
four genes (FKT1, POMGnT1, POMT1, FKRP) encoding putative glycosyltransferases
have been identified in a subset of patients characterized by a deficient
glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan on muscle biopsy. FKRP mutations account for
a broad spectrum of patients with muscular dystrophy, from a severe congenital
form with or without mental retardation (MDC1C) to a much milder limb-girdle
muscular dystrophy (LGMD2I). We identified two novel homozygous missense FKRP
mutations, one, A455D, in six unrelated Tunisian patients and the other, V405L,
in an Algerian boy. The patients, between the ages of 3 and 12 years, presented
with a severe form of MDC1C with calf hypertrophy and high serum creatine kinase
levels. None had ever walked. Two had cardiac dysfunction and one strabismus.
They all had mental retardation, microcephaly, cerebellar cysts, and hypoplasia
of the vermis. White matter abnormalities were found in five, mostly when cranial
magnetic resonance imaging was performed at a young age. These abnormalities were
shown to regress in one patient, as has been observed in patients with Fukuyama
CMD. Identification of a new microsatellite close to the FKRP gene allowed us to
confirm the founder origin of the Tunisian mutation. These results strongly
suggest that particular FKRP mutations in the homozygous state induce structural
and clinical neurological lesions in addition to muscular dystrophy. They also
relate MDC1C to other CMD with abnormal protein glycosylation and disordered
brain function.