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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycosylation is the most frequent modification of proteins and is important for many ligand-receptor interactions. Recently, defects in protein glycosylation have been linked to several forms of congenital
muscular dystrophy
that are frequently associated with brain abnormalities. Muscle-eye-brain disease and
Walker
-Warburg syndrome are caused by mutations in enzymes involved in O-mannosylation, whereas Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy and congenital
muscular dystrophy
type 1C are caused by mutations in genes that encode putative glycosyltransferases. The common factor in these disorders is defective processing and maturation of a protein called alpha-dystroglycan. This is thought to disrupt the link between alpha-dystroglycan and components of the extracellular matrix, and result in muscle disease and, in many cases, a neuronal-migration disorder.
...
PMID:Protein glycosylation in disease: new insights into the congenital muscular dystrophies. 1270 4
Walker
-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by congenital
muscular dystrophy
, structural eye abnormalities and severe brain malformations. We performed an immunohistochemical and electron microscopy study of a muscle biopsy from a patient affected by WWS carrying a homozygous frameshift mutation in O-mannosyltransferase 1 gene (POMT1). alpha-Dystroglycan glycosylated epitope was not detected in muscle fibers and intramuscular peripheral nerves. Laminin alpha2 chain and perlecan were reduced in muscle fibers and well preserved in intramuscular peripheral nerves. The basal lamina in several muscle fibers showed discontinuities and detachment from the plasmalemma. Most nuclei, including myonuclei and satellite cell nuclei, showed detachment or complete absence of peripheral heterochromatin from the nuclear envelope. Apoptotic changes were detected in 3% of muscle fibers. The particular combination of basal lamina and nuclear changes may suggest that a complex pathogenetic mechanism, affecting several subcellular compartments, underlies the degenerative process in WWS muscle.
...
PMID:Extracellular matrix and nuclear abnormalities in skeletal muscle of a patient with Walker-Warburg syndrome caused by POMT1 mutation. 1275 35
We report a two-year-old Caucasian boy who had neonatal seizures and was found to have bilateral occipito-temporal polymicrogyria on neonatal brain MRI. The child had no additional neurological abnormality other than the neonatal seizures, but serum CK was found to be elevated (5 - 7 times normal values) and the muscle biopsy showed evidence of early
muscular dystrophy
. Detailed protein and genetic studies did not allow the identification of a known form of
muscular dystrophy
. The boy has been followed regularly and he currently has mild global developmental delay but no clinical signs of muscle involvement. The association of polymicrogyria and
muscular dystrophy
is known to occur in Fukuyama and
Walker
Warburg muscular dystrophies, in muscle-eye-brain disease and in some patients with merosin deficient CMD. However the absence of weakness and of eye involvement, the normal expression of merosin and alpha dystroglycan and the pattern of brain involvement make it very unlikely that the child is affected by one of these forms. As the pattern of brain involvement and the muscle pathology is not typical of one of the forms of neuronal migration disorders secondary to a known gene defect, we suspect that the combination of muscle and brain involvement found in this child is not coincidental. Our findings suggest that serum CK should be determined in children with undiagnosed polymicrogyria, even in the absence of weakness. This may lead to an expansion of our understanding of muscle dystrophies and cortical dysplasias.
...
PMID:Occipito-temporal polymicrogyria and subclinical muscular dystrophy. 1277 31
Dystroglycan is a key complex between basal lamina laminin, extracellularly and membrano-cytoskeleton, intracellularly. The damage of this linkage is turned out to cause muscular dystrophies. Dystroglycan knockout is lethal. Dystroglycan-associated intracellular proteins such as dystrophin, dystrobrevin, sarcoglycans, plectin and caveolin-3 are responsible for causing severe (Duchenne type) and moderate forms (Becker, LGMDs). Laminin, dystroglycan-binding extracellular protein, is deficient in the most severe form of congenital
muscular dystrophy
with normal intelligence and eye. Recently, a remarkable progress is made in most severe forms of congenital
muscular dystrophy
with anomalies of brain and eye such as Fukuyama type (Japan) and muscle-eye-brain disease (Finland). The gene product for Fukuyama type, fukutin, belongs to a family of glycosylation enzymes in bacteria and yeast. Since alpha-dystroglycan contains 14-15 o-glycans, ser/thr-mannose 2-1 GlcNAc 4-1 Gal 3-2 Sial in the middle third mucin-domain and the sial-o-glycan is essential for laminin-binding, and since alpha-dystroglycan is defective in Fukuyama type sarcolemma with anti both sugar moiety- and peptide-antidodies, defective fukutin causes incomplete o-glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan. In '02, it is clarified that a glycosylation enzyme, POMGnT1 which modifies GlcNAc onto ser/thr-mannose, is defective in 6 MEB patients. The loss of the enzyme activity is turned out to lose alpha-dystroglycan from sarcolemma of MEB. These data strongly suggests that o-glycosylation defect of alpha-dystroglycan causes the most severe congenital
muscular dystrophy
such as Fukuyama type, MEB and
Walker
Warburg syndrome.
...
PMID:[Dystroglycan linkage and muscular dystrophy]. 1278 74
Walker
-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the combined involvement of the central nervous and skeletal muscle systems. Although the molecular basis of WWS remains unknown, defects in the muscle fibre basal lamina are characteristic of other forms of congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD). In agreement with this, some forms of CMD, due to glycosyltransferase defects, display a reduction in the immunolabelling of alpha-dystroglycan, whilst beta-dystroglycan labelling appears normal. Here we describe an almost complete absence of alpha-dystroglycan using both immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting in two patients with WWS. In addition, there was a mild reduction of laminin-alpha 2. In contrast, immunohistochemical labelling of perlecan and collagen VI was normal. Linkage analysis excluded the recently identified POMT1 locus, responsible for a proportion of WWS cases. These results confirm that WWS is a genetically heterogeneous condition and suggest that disruption of the alpha-dystroglycan/laminin-alpha 2 axis in the basal lamina may play a role in the degeneration of muscle fibres in WWS-also in cases not due to POMT1 defects.
...
PMID:Profound skeletal muscle depletion of alpha-dystroglycan in Walker-Warburg syndrome. 1278 39
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD),
Walker
-Warburg syndrome (WWS), and muscle-eye-brain (MEB) disease are clinically similar autosomal recessive disorders characterized by congenital
muscular dystrophy
, lissencephaly, and eye anomalies. Through positional cloning, we identified the gene for FCMD and MEB, which encodes the fukutin protein and the protein O-linked mannose beta1, 2-N-acetylglucosaminy ltransferase (POMGnT1), respectively. Recent studies have revealed that posttranslational modification of alpha-dystroglycan is associated with these congenital muscular dystrophies with brain malformations. In this review Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), other CMDs with brain malformations, and their relation with alpha-dystroglycan are discussed.
...
PMID:Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD) and alpha-dystroglycanopathy. 1289 68
Recently, post-translational modification of proteins has been defined as a new area of focus for
muscular dystrophy
research by the identification of a group of disease genes that encode known or putative glycosylation enzymes.
Walker
-Warburg Syndrome (WWS) and muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB) are caused by mutations in two genes involved in O-mannosylation, POMT1 and POMGnT1, respectively. Fukuyama muscular dystrophy (FCMD) is due to mutations in fukutin, a putative phospholigand transferase. Congenital muscular dystrophy type 1C and limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2I are allelic, both being due to mutations in the gene-encoding fukutin-related protein (FKRP). Finally, the causative gene in the myodystrophy (myd) mouse is a putative bifunctional glycosyltransferase (Large). WWS, MEB, FCMD and the myd mouse are also associated with neuronal migration abnormalities (often type II lissencephaly) and ocular or retinal defects. A deficiency in post-translational modification of alpha-dystroglycan is a common feature of all these muscular dystrophies and is thought to involve O-glycosylation pathways. This abnormally modified alpha-dystroglycan is deficient in binding to extracellular matrix ligands, including laminin and agrin. Selective deletion of dystroglycan in the central nervous system (CNS) produces brain abnormalities with striking similarities to WWS, MEB, FCMD and the myd mouse. Thus, impaired dystroglycan function is strongly implicated in these diseases. However, it is unlikely that these five glycosylation enzymes only have a role in glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan and it is important that other protein targets are identified.
...
PMID:Glycosylation defects: a new mechanism for muscular dystrophy? 1292 72
The congenital muscular dystrophies (CMD) are a heterogeneous group of autosomal recessive disorders. A new pathomechanism has recently been identified in a group of these disorders in which known or putative glycosyltransferases are defective. Common to all these conditions is the hypoglycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan. Fukuyama CMD, muscle-eye-brain disease and
Walker
-Warburg syndrome, each associated with eye abnormalities and neuronal migration defects, result from mutations in fukutin, POMGnT1 and POMT1, respectively, while mutations in the fukutin-related protein (FKRP) gene cause congenital
muscular dystrophy
1C, typically lacking brain involvement. Another putative glycosyltransferase, Large, is mutated in the myodystrophy mouse. The human homologue of this gene is therefore a strong candidate for involvement in novel forms of
muscular dystrophy
. We studied 36 patients with
muscular dystrophy
and either mental retardation, structural brain changes or abnormal alpha-dystroglycan immunolabelling, unlinked to any reported CMD loci. Linkage analysis in seven informative families excluded involvement of LARGE but sequencing of this gene in the remaining 29 families identified one patient with a G1525A (Glu509Lys) missense mutation and a 1 bp insertion, 1999insT. This 17-year-old girl presented with congenital
muscular dystrophy
, profound mental retardation, white matter changes and subtle structural abnormalities on brain MRI. Her skeletal muscle biopsy showed reduced immunolabelling of alpha-dystroglycan. Immunoblotting with an antibody to a glycosylated epitope demonstrated a reduced molecular weight form of alpha-dystroglycan that retained some laminin binding activity. This is the first description of mutations in the human LARGE gene and we propose to name this new disorder MDC1D.
...
PMID:Mutations in the human LARGE gene cause MDC1D, a novel form of congenital muscular dystrophy with severe mental retardation and abnormal glycosylation of alpha-dystroglycan. 1296 29
Walker
-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is a congenital
muscular dystrophy
associated with neuronal migration disorder and structural eye abnormalities. The mutations in the O-mannosyltransferase 1 gene (POMT1) were identified recently in 20% of patients with WWS. The authors report on a patient with WWS and a novel POMT1 mutation. Their patient expressed alpha-dystroglycan (alpha-DG) core protein, but fully glycosylated alpha-DG antibody epitopes were absent, associated with the loss of laminin-binding activity.
...
PMID:POMT1 mutation results in defective glycosylation and loss of laminin-binding activity in alpha-DG. 1503 15
A woman aged 59 years with adult-onset progressive myopathy had anti-Golgi (giantin) autoantibody in the serum. Limb-muscle biopsy revealed chronic myopathy with paucity of cellular reactions and reduced immunostaining for alpha-dystroglycan. The similarity of the current patient with cases of hereditary alpha-dystroglycanopathies (Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy,
Walker
-Warburg syndrome, muscle-eye-brain disease, congenital
muscular dystrophy
type 1C, and limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2I) suggests that the Golgi apparatus is the target organelle in a subset of myopathies.
...
PMID:Progressive myopathy with circulating autoantibody against giantin in the Golgi apparatus. 1515 5
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