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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A girl born from consanguineous Turkish parents had marked hypotonia from birth and delayed milestones. She was able to stand unaided by 3 years of age with then progressive worsening of motor abilities. She had a severe non-progressive mental deficiency. Epilepsy occurred by 6 years of age. Ophthalmological investigation was normal. A marked white matter high signal was seen on magnetic resonance imaging without cortical dysplasia. Dystrophic changes were seen on muscle biopsy. Two brothers had had a similar history with early death. Muscular immunocytochemical studies showed a normal staining for dystrophin and all dystrophin related glycoproteins (including 43 and 50 DAG). Merosin staining was normal. This case differs from Fukuyama's congenital dystrophy, from
merosin
negative congenital
muscular dystrophy
, or from other congenital
muscular dystrophy
with CNS dysfunction. It underlines the heterogeneity of congenital
muscular dystrophy
and the non-specific aspect of white matter changes on neuro-imaging.
...
PMID:Merosin positive congenital muscular dystrophy with mental deficiency, epilepsy and MRI changes in the cerebral white matter. 918 83
A survey was performed of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in 21 patients with congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) with cerebral abnormalities to evaluate the contribution of MRI to the classification of CMD patients. In 5 patients with Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), MRI showed hydrocephalus due to aqueduct stenosis, generalized cerebral cortical agyric or pachygyric polymicrogyria, diffuse cerebral hemispheric white matter abnormalities, and malformations of posterior fossa structures. In 4 patients with muscle-eye-brain disease, MRI showed cortical dysplasia, but less severe than in WWS. The cerebral white matter either was normal or contained multiple focal abnormalities. Malformations of posterior fossa structures were present. Eight patients, classified as having classic
merosin
-deficient CMD (MD-CMD), had diffuse cerebral hemispheric white matter abnormalities, no other abnormalities. One patient with MD-CMD had only a few, focal white matter abnormalities. Three CMD patients had occipital agyria, otherwise normal gyration, multifocal or more diffuse cerebral white matter changes, and variable hypoplasia of pons and vermis. Two of the 3 patients had negative muscle
merosin
staining. The conclusion of the study is that MRI is an important adjunct in the classification of CMD patients. CMD with occipital agyria can be regarded as a newly recognized, separate CMD subtype.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in classification of congenital muscular dystrophies with brain abnormalities. 922 85
We studied the immunohistochemical expression of laminin subunits alpha 2, alpha 1, beta 1 in muscle and skin biopsy samples from three patients with congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD), and from ten control patients investigated for various neuromuscular disorders. Merosin alpha 2 chain was not detectable in the basement membrane of muscle fibers, or in the nerve endings, cutaneous nerves, and corium in the skin of the CMD patients, whereas it was clearly expressed in the skin biopsy samples from control patients, especially in the nerve endings of the arrector pili muscles. Laminin alpha 1 chain was expressed in the corium, in the muscle fiber membranes of arrector pili muscles and in cutaneous nerve fibers, perineurium and blood vessels in controls and in CMD patients. Laminin beta 1 chain was faintly expressed in the corium, and a diffuse labeling was detected on arrector pili muscle with enhanced expression at nerve endings, intracutaneous nerves and capillaries, with similar findings in all biopsy specimens. For
merosin
-negative CMD patients, skin biopsy may provide a diagnostic alternative to muscle biopsy since
merosin
deficiency can be demonstrated in the skin neural structures, and in particular in the nerve endings of the arrector pili smooth muscles.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical study of merosin-negative congenital muscular dystrophy: laminin alpha 2 deficiency in skin biopsy. 925 83
Recent advances in molecular genetics research have revolutionised our understanding of the childhood muscular dystrophies. The first breakthrough came in 1987 with the identification of the gene for dystrophin, the protein that is abnormal in X-linked Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Dystrophin is bound to a complex of proteins in the muscle membrane, and primary abnormalities of these proteins have now been identified as the cause of some autosomally inherited forms of
muscular dystrophy
. A group of transmembrane proteins known as alpha- (adhalin) beta-, gamma- and delta-sarcoglycan are deficient in autosomal recessive limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, and the extracellular matrix protein
merosin
(alpha2-laminin), is deficient in a subset of patients with congenital
muscular dystrophy
. Identification of primary deficiencies in these 'dystrophin associated proteins' will result in improved diagnostic accuracy, more accurate genetic counselling and, in some cases, the availability of prenatal diagnosis.
...
PMID:Recent advances in diagnosis of the childhood muscular dystrophies. 925 92
Primary deficiency of
merosin
is the cause of the classic form of congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) accompanied by brain white matter abnormalities. We report a female infant with dystrophinopathy who was deficient in
merosin
in skeletal muscle. The patient had a phenotype of typical CMD and white matter abnormalities on brain MRI. Merosin was greatly reduced in the biopsied skeletal muscle. However, the expression of dystroglycan and syntrophin was also greatly reduced, and the immunoreactivity for the antibodies against the cysteine-rich/C-terminal domains of dystrophin was absent in the sarcolemma. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis of the dystrophin gene revealed a complete lack of exons 71 through 74. In skeletal muscle, only the mutant gene was expressed. These results suggest that the patient is a symptomatic Duchenne muscular dystrophy carrier with skewed X-inactivation. This patient illustrates for the first time that a dystrophin abnormality can cause a secondary deficiency of
merosin
in dystrophinopathy. The reduction of
merosin
may account for the clinical phenotype of CMD and correlate with the white matter abnormalities in our patient.
...
PMID:Deficiency of syntrophin, dystroglycan, and merosin in a female infant with a congenital muscular dystrophy phenotype lacking cysteine-rich and C-terminal domains of dystrophin. 927 Jun
Laminin-2 (
merosin
) is a heterotrimer composed of alpha 2, beta 1 and gamma 1 chains. Approximately half of the cases with the classical form of congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) have a deficiency of the
laminin alpha 2 chain
, encoded by the LAMA2 gene on chromosome 6q22. This disorder is often termed
merosin
-deficient CMD. Skeletal and cardiac muscle, and the peripheral and central nervous systems, all express laminin alpha 2 and can be affected in
merosin
-deficient CMD. Normal skin also expresses all three chains of laminin-2 at the epidermal/dermal junction, around hair follicles and in the sensory nerves. Skin biopsies can therefore be used to assess
merosin
status in patients. We show here an absence of laminin alpha 2 in skin from four cases of CMD with a severe phenotype and abnormal magnetic resonance image (MRI) of the brain, in contrast to normal expression in one case of mild CMD with normal MRI, and in five controls. An additional case of CMD had a partial deficiency of laminin alpha 2 in the skin and severe motor disability, but a normal MRI. Sensory nerves in this case showed normal expression of laminin alpha 2, in contrast to its absence in the severe cases. The expression of laminin beta 1 was also reduced in skin from cases of
merosin
-deficient CMD. In contrast to human fetal muscle, the laminin alpha 2 protein was not detected in fetal skin up to 23 weeks of gestation. The laminin beta 1 and gamma 1 chains, and the mRNA for laminin alpha 2, however, were present. Studies of mRNA of cultured skin cells suggest that fibroblasts are the major source of laminin alpha 2, not keratinocytes. Our data show that skin is useful for the assessment of
merosin
status in patients with CMD and that skin fibroblasts may be a useful source of tissue-specific RNA. In addition, we show that there is a tissue-specific difference in the developmental expression of the laminin alpha 2 protein.
...
PMID:Expression of laminin chains in skin in merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy. 930 12
The alpha-actinins belong to a superfamily of cytoskeletal proteins, and their role in human genetic diseases is still unclear. Therefore, they could be good candidates for muscular dystrophies of unknown etiology. We have analyzed alpha-actinin-3 (ACTN3) in muscle biopsies from a total of 54 patients. A complete deficiency was found in 9 patients: 2/12 with classical
merosin
-positive congenital MD (CMD), 1/12 with Severe Childhood Autosomal Recessive MD (DLMD), but with a positive IF pattern for the proteins of the sarcoglycan complex: 3/14 with mild limb-girdie MD (1LGMD2A and 2 yet unclassified), 1/10 with sarcoglycanopathies (LGMD2C), and 2/6 with Xp21 Duchenne MD (DMD). Patients within the same family, and with the same disease (DMD, LGMD2A, LGMD2C), were discordant for ACTN3 deficiency. Additionally, no correlation was found with the degree of muscle degeneration, nor with the clinical course. One ACTN3-deficient CMD patient showed no mRNA expression for the muscle ACTN3 gene, but the other ACTN3-deficient patients with different forms of
muscular dystrophy
showed very low or no mRNA expression as well. These results show that the deficiency of ACTN3 is a secondary effect in these dystrophies.
...
PMID:Deficiency of alpha-actinin-3 (ACTN3) occurs in different forms of muscular dystrophy. 930 13
Mutations in genes coding for dystrophin, for alpha, beta, gamma, and delta-sarcoglycans, or for the alpha2 chain of the basement membrane component
merosin
(laminin-2/4) cause various forms of
muscular dystrophy
. Analyses of integrins showed an abnormal expression and localization of alpha7beta1 isoforms in myofibers of
merosin
-deficient human patients and mice, but not in dystrophin-deficient or sarcoglycan-deficient humans and animals. It was shown previously that skeletal muscle fibers require
merosin
for survival and function (Vachon, P.H., F. Loechel, H. Xu, U.M. Wewer, and E. Engvall. 1996. J. Cell Biol. 134:1483-1497). Correction of
merosin
deficiency in vitro through cell transfection with the
merosin
alpha2 chain restored the normal localization of alpha7beta1D integrins as well as myotube survival. Overexpression of the apoptosis-suppressing molecule Bcl-2 also promoted the survival of
merosin
-deficient myotubes, but did not restore a normal expression of alpha7beta1D integrins. Blocking of beta1 integrins in normal myotubes induced apoptosis and severely reduced their survival. These findings (a) identify alpha7beta1D integrins as the de facto receptors for
merosin
in skeletal muscle; (b) indicate a
merosin
dependence for the accurate expression and membrane localization of alpha7beta1D integrins in myofibers; (c) provide a molecular basis for the critical role of
merosin
in myofiber survival; and (d) add new insights to the pathogenesis of neuromuscular disorders.
...
PMID:Integrins (alpha7beta1) in muscle function and survival. Disrupted expression in merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy. 931 89
We studied the distribution of laminin beta 2 chain in the skeletal muscle basement membrane of 16 patients with congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) by immunohistochemistry. A dramatic reduction in the laminin beta 2 staining was observed in four patients with classical
merosin
-negative CMD. A moderate reduction of laminin beta 2 labelling was observed in four patients with partial
merosin
deficiency and two patients with
merosin
-positive CMD. Two patients with
merosin
-positive CMD had no apparent changes in the expression of laminin beta 2. In three patients and one fetus diagnosed as Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) the laminin beta 2 pattern was similar to normal controls. We conclude that a primary deficiency in the
laminin alpha 2 chain
may lead to a vast or moderate reduction in the laminin beta 2 chain in the skeletal muscle membrane.
...
PMID:Changes of laminin beta 2 chain expression in congenital muscular dystrophy. 932 1
We present a Japanese patient who has congenital
muscular dystrophy
, with partial
merosin
deficiency. The patient had characteristic findings of clinical features and brain MRI. Muscle biopsy showed advanced
muscular dystrophy
, with greatly reduced muscle fibers and massive infiltration of interstitial connective and fatty tissues. On immunostaining for cytoskeletal proteins,
merosin
was greatly reduced. The other cytoskeletal proteins, including dystrophin and 50 kDa alpha-sarcoglycan were normally expressed around all muscle fibers.
...
PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy with partial deficiency of merosin. 933 6
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