Mild phenotype of nemaline myopathy with sleep hypoventilation due to a mutation in the skeletal muscle alpha-actin (ACTA1) gene.

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Citation

Jungbluth H, Sewry CA, Brown SC, Nowak KJ, Laing NG, Wallgren-Pettersson C, Pelin K, Manzur AY, Mercuri E, Dubowitz V, Muntoni F

Mild phenotype of nemaline myopathy with sleep hypoventilation due to a mutation in the skeletal muscle alpha-actin (ACTA1) gene.

Neuromuscul Disord. 2001 Jan;11(1):35-40.

PubMed ID
11166164 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Nemaline myopathy is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous condition. The clinical spectrum ranges from severe cases with antenatal or neonatal onset and early death to late onset cases with only slow progression. Three genes are known to cause nemaline myopathy: the genes for nebulin (NEB) on chromosome 2q22, slow alpha-tropomyosin (TPM3) on chromosome 1q21 and skeletal muscle alpha-actin (ACTA1) on chromosome 1q42. We present a 39-year-old lady with a mild form of nemaline myopathy, whom we have followed over a period of 25 years. She presented at the age of 7 years with symptoms of mild axial and proximal muscle weakness. The overall course was essentially static, but at 36 years, she went into life-threatening respiratory failure, for which she is currently treated with night-time ventilation. Muscle biopsies at 12, 17 and 39 years of age showed typical nemaline rods, particularly in type 1 fibres. Areas with unevenness of oxidative stain were present in the second and third biopsies. The presence of rods and core-like areas was confirmed on electron microscopy. There was no detectable alteration in actin expression immunocytochemically. A dominant missense mutation in the skeletal muscle alpha-actin gene (ACTA1) was found. This case illustrates the clinical and genetic heterogeneity of nemaline myopathy, and one phenotype of the wide spectrum of severity caused by mutations in the skeletal muscle alpha-actin (ACTA1) gene. In addition, it shows the diversity of pathological features that can occur in congenital myopathies due to mutations in the same gene.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Actin, alpha skeletal muscleP68133Details