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Published in: BMC Neurology 1/2022

Open Access 01-12-2022 | Diseases of the neuromuscular synapses and muscles | Research

Dominantly inherited myosin IIa myopathy caused by aberrant splicing of MYH2

Authors: Carola Hedberg-Oldfors, Ólöf Elíasdóttir, Mats Geijer, Christopher Lindberg, Anders Oldfors

Published in: BMC Neurology | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

Myosin heavy chain (MyHC) isoforms define the three major muscle fiber types in human extremity muscles. Slow beta/cardiac MyHC (MYH7) is expressed in type 1 muscle fibers. MyHC IIa (MYH2) and MyHC IIx (MYH1) are expressed in type 2A and 2B fibers, respectively. Whereas recessive MyHC IIa myopathy has been described in many cases, myopathy caused by dominant MYH2 variants is rare and has been described with clinical manifestations and muscle pathology in only one family and two sporadic cases.

Methods

We investigated three patients from one family with a dominantly inherited myopathy by clinical investigation, whole-genome sequencing, muscle biopsy, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Results

Three siblings, one woman and two men now 54, 56 and 66 years old, had experienced muscle weakness initially affecting the lower limbs from young adulthood. They have now generalized proximal muscle weakness affecting ambulation, but no ophthalmoplegia. Whole-genome sequencing identified a heterozygous MYH2 variant, segregating with the disease in the three affected individuals: c.5673 + 1G > C. Analysis of cDNA confirmed the predicted splicing defect with skipping of exon 39 and loss of residues 1860–1891 in the distal tail of the MyHC IIa, largely overlapping with the filament assembly region (aa1877–1905). Muscle biopsy in two of the affected individuals showed prominent type 1 muscle fiber predominance with only a few very small, scattered type 2A fibers and no type 2B fibers. The small type 2A fibers were frequently hybrid fibers with either slow MyHC or embryonic MyHC expression. The type 1 fibers showed variation in fiber size, internal nuclei and some structural alterations. There was fatty infiltration, which was also demonstrated by MRI.

Conclusion

Dominantly inherited MyHC IIa myopathy due to a splice defect causing loss of amino acids 1860–1891 in the distal tail of the MyHC IIa protein including part of the assembly competence domain. The myopathy is manifesting with slowly progressive muscle weakness without overt ophthalmoplegia and markedly reduced number and size of type 2 fibers.
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Metadata
Title
Dominantly inherited myosin IIa myopathy caused by aberrant splicing of MYH2
Authors
Carola Hedberg-Oldfors
Ólöf Elíasdóttir
Mats Geijer
Christopher Lindberg
Anders Oldfors
Publication date
01-12-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Neurology / Issue 1/2022
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2377
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-022-02935-4

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