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Expansion of GGC Repeat in GIPC1 Is Associated with Oculopharyngodistal Myopathy

Authors :
Shigehisa Ura
Pidong Li
Xueyu Guo
Jianwen Deng
Juan Zhao
Daojun Hong
Chang Zhou
Tatsuro Sato
Xing-Hua Luan
Yun Yuan
Zhaoxia Wang
Lingchao Meng
Yiming Zheng
Yu Liang
Fan Liang
Yanan Su
Zhiying Xie
Jiaxi Yu
Li Cao
Chuanzhu Yan
Aritoshi Iida
Tomohiro Hayashi
Qingqing Wang
He Lv
Jing Liu
Min Zhu
Qiang Gang
Masashi Ogasawara
Meiko Hashimoto Maeda
Meng Yu
Ichizo Nishino
Yawen Zhao
Wei Zhang
Yasushi Oya
Source :
Am J Hum Genet
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Oculopharyngodistal myopathy (OPDM) is an adult-onset inherited neuromuscular disorder characterized by progressive ptosis, external ophthalmoplegia, and weakness of the masseter, facial, pharyngeal, and distal limb muscles. The myopathological features are presence of rimmed vacuoles (RVs) in the muscle fibers and myopathic changes of differing severity. Inheritance is variable, with either putative autosomal-dominant or autosomal-recessive pattern. Here, using a comprehensive strategy combining whole-genome sequencing (WGS), long-read whole-genome sequencing (LRS), linkage analysis, repeat-primed polymerase chain reaction (RP-PCR), and fluorescence amplicon length analysis polymerase chain reaction (AL-PCR), we identified an abnormal GGC repeat expansion in the 5′ UTR of GIPC1 in one out of four families and three sporadic case subjects from a Chinese OPDM cohort. Expanded GGC repeats were further confirmed as the cause of OPDM in an additional 2 out of 4 families and 6 out of 13 sporadic Chinese individuals with OPDM, as well as 7 out of 194 unrelated Japanese individuals with OPDM. Methylation, qRT-PCR, and western blot analysis indicated that GIPC1 mRNA levels were increased while protein levels were unaltered in OPDM-affected individuals. RNA sequencing indicated p53 signaling, vascular smooth muscle contraction, ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, and ribosome pathways were involved in the pathogenic mechanisms of OPDM-affected individuals with GGC repeat expansion in GIPC1. This study provides further evidence that OPDM is associated with GGC repeat expansions in distinct genes and highly suggests that expanded GGC repeat units are essential in the pathogenesis of OPDM, regardless of the genes in which the expanded repeats are located.

Details

ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
106
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae3c7e8d0683d594ed2238241e539049
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2020.04.011