Mutations in the N-terminal actin-binding domain of filamin C cause a distal myopathy.
Rachael M RM Duff,
Valerie V Tay,
Peter P Hackman,
Gianina G Ravenscroft,
Catriona C McLean,
Paul P Kennedy,
Alina A Steinbach,
Wiebke W Schöffler,
Peter F M PF van der Ven,
Dieter O DO Fürst,
Jaeguen J Song,
Kristina K Djinović-Carugo,
Sini S Penttilä,
Olayinka O Raheem,
Katrina K Reardon,
Alessandro A Malandrini,
Simona S Gambelli,
Marcello M Villanova,
Kristen J KJ Nowak,
David R DR Williams,
John E JE Landers,
Robert H RH Brown,
Bjarne B Udd and
Nigel G NG Laing
RNA 88(6):729-40 (2011)
PMID 21620354
Linkage analysis of the dominant distal myopathy we previously identified in a large Australian family demonstrated one significant linkage region located on chromosome 7 and encompassing 18.6 Mbp and 151 genes. The strongest candidate gene was FLNC because filamin C, the encoded protein, is muscle-specific and associated with myofibrillar myopathy. Sequencing of FLNC cDNA identified a c.752T>C (p.Met251Thr) mutation in the N-terminal actin-binding domain (ABD); this mutation segregated with the disease and was absent in 200 controls. We identified an Italian family with the same phenotype and found a c.577G>A (p.Ala193Thr) filamin C ABD mutation that segregated with the disease. Filamin C ABD mutations have not been described, although filamin A and filamin B ABD mutations cause multiple musculoskeletal disorders. The distal myopathy phenotype and muscle pathology in the two families differ from myofibrillar myopathies caused by filamin C rod and dimerization domain mutations because of the distinct involvement of hand muscles and lack of pathological protein aggregation. Thus, like the position of FLNA and B mutations, the position of the FLNC mutation determines disease phenotype. The two filamin C ABD mutations increase actin-binding affinity in a manner similar to filamin A and filamin B ABD mutations. Cell-culture expression of the c.752T>C (p.Met251)Thr mutant filamin C ABD demonstrated reduced nuclear localization as did mutant filamin A and filamin B ABDs. Expression of both filamin C ABD mutants as full-length proteins induced increased aggregation of filamin. We conclude filamin C ABD mutations cause a recognizable distal myopathy, most likely through increased actin affinity, similar to the pathological mechanism of filamin A and filamin B ABD mutations.
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.04.021
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