1. Recurrent Arginine Substitutions in the ACTG2 Gene are the Primary Driver of Disease Burden and Severity in Visceral Myopathy
- Author
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James D. Weisfeld-Adams, Sandra Heck, Margaret Harr, Jennifer E. Posey, James R. Lupski, Yazmin Enchautegui Colon, Bertrand Isidor, Pengfei Liu, Maciej Bagłaj, Austin Larson, Katherine B. Bosanko, Bert Callewaert, Nurit Assia Batzir, Maria Linda Rocha, Ashley Cannon, Michael F. Wangler, Leon Bofferding, Kimberly Nugent, Katerina Wells, Michael B. Petersen, Robert Smigiel, Skander Bouassida, Elizabeth Roeder, Arthur L. Beaudet, Helen Mar Fan, Pilar L. Magoulas, Ian Tully, Ronit Marom, Marjan M. Nezarati, Scott D. McLean, Shalini N. Jhangiani, Pranjali K Bhagwat, Anna C.E. Hurst, Adolfo D. Garnica, Zeynep Coban Akdemir, and Rebecca O. Littlejohn
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,Genotype ,Colon ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Urinary Bladder ,Disease ,Biology ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,dysmotility ,smooth muscle ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,visceral myopathy ,Exome Sequencing ,Genetics ,medicine ,Missense mutation ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Allele ,Genetics (clinical) ,Exome sequencing ,Genetic Association Studies ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,megacystis-microcolon intestinal hypoperistalsis ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction ,Megacystis ,Microcolon ,medicine.disease ,Actins ,Transplantation ,Phenotype ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Molecular Diagnostic Techniques ,ACTG2 ,Mutation ,Female - Abstract
Visceral myopathy with abnormal intestinal and bladder peristalsis includes a clinical spectrum with megacystis-microcolon intestinal hypoperistalsis syndrome and chronic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. The vast majority of cases are caused by dominant variants in ACTG2; however, the overall genetic architecture of visceral myopathy has not been well-characterized. We ascertained 53 families, with visceral myopathy based on megacystis, functional bladder/gastrointestinal obstruction, or microcolon. A combination of targeted ACTG2 sequencing and exome sequencing was used. We report a molecular diagnostic rate of 64% (34/53), of which 97% (33/34) is attributed to ACTG2. Strikingly, missense mutations in five conserved arginine residues involving CpG dinucleotides accounted for 49% (26/53) of disease in the cohort. As a group, the ACTG2-negative cases had a more favorable clinical outcome and more restricted disease. Within the ACTG2-positive group, poor outcomes (characterized by total parenteral nutrition dependence, death, or transplantation) were invariably due to one of the arginine missense alleles. Analysis of specific residues suggests a severity spectrum of p.Arg178>p.Arg257>p.Arg40 along with other less-frequently reported sites p.Arg63 and p.Arg211. These results provide genotype–phenotype correlation for ACTG2-related disease and demonstrate the importance of arginine missense changes in visceral myopathy.
- Published
- 2020
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