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Published online before print May 30, 2007, doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000269792.63927.86)
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Received December 4, 2006
Accepted February 26, 2007

Congenital neuromuscular disease with uniform type 1 fiber and RYR1 mutation

I. Sato MD, S. Wu MD, M. C.A. Ibarra MD, PhD, Y. K. Hayashi MD, PhD, H. Fujita MD, M. Tojo MD, S. J. Oh MD, I. Nonaka MD, PhD, S. Noguchi PhD, and I. Nishino MD, PhD*

From the Department of Neuromuscular Research (I.S., S.W., C.A.I.M., Y.K.H., I.N., S.N., I.N.), National Institute of Neuroscience, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, Kodaira, Department of Pediatrics (I.S.), Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Department of Pediatrics (H.F.), Hirosaki University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics (M.T.), Niigata Prefecture Hamagumi Medical Rehabilitation Center for Handicapped Children, Japan; and Department of Neurology (S.J.O.), University of Alabama at Birmingham.


* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: nishino{at}ncnp.go.jp.

ABSTRACT Background: Congenital neuromuscular disease with uniform type 1 fiber (CNMDU1) is a rare form of congenital myopathy, which is pathologically diagnosed by the presence of more than 99% of type 1 fiber, with no specific structural changes. Its pathogenic mechanism is still unknown. We recently reported that almost all patients with central core disease (CCD) with ryanodine receptor 1 gene (RYR1) mutations in the C-terminal domain had type 1 fibers, nearly exclusively, in addition to typical central cores. Objective: To investigate whether CNMDU1 is associated with RYR1 mutation. Methods: We studied 10 unrelated Japanese patients who were diagnosed to have CNMDU1 based on clinical features and muscle pathology showing more than 99% type 1 muscle fibers. We extracted genomic DNA from frozen muscles and directly sequenced all 106 exons and their flanking intron-exon boundaries of RYR1. Results: Four of 10 patients had a heterozygous mutation, three missense and one deletion, all in the C-terminal domain of RYR1. Two missense mutations were previously reported in CCD patients. Clinically, patients with mutations in RYR1 showed milder phenotype compared with those without mutations. Conclusion: Congenital neuromuscular disease with uniform type 1 fiber (CNMDU1) in 40% of patients is associated with mutations in the C-terminal domain of RYR1, suggesting that CNMDU1 is allelic to central core disease at least in some patients.




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Unraveling RYR1 mutations and muscle biopsies
Neurology, January 8, 2008; 70(2): 99 - 100.
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