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    MLIP causes recessive myopathy with rhabdomyolysis, myalgia and baseline elevated serum creatine kinase

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    Main Article (10.70Mb)
    Date
    2021-09-01
    Author
    Lopes Abath Neto, Osorio
    Medne, Livija
    Donkervoort, Sandra
    Rodríguez-García, Maria Elena
    Bolduc, Véronique
    Hu, Ying
    Guadagnin, Eleonora
    Foley, A. Reghan
    Brandsema, John F.
    Glanzman, Allan M.
    Tennekoon, Gihan I.
    Santi, Mariarita
    Berger, Justin H.
    Megeney, Lynn A.
    Komaki, Hirofumi
    Inoue, Michio
    Cotrina-Vinagre, Francisco Javier
    Hernández-Lain, Aurelio
    Martin-Hernández, Elena
    Williams, Linford
    Borell, Sabine
    Schorling, David
    Lin, Kimberly
    Kolokotronis, Konstantinos
    Lichter-Konecki, Uta
    Kirschner, Janbernd
    Nishino, Ichizo
    Banwell, Brenda
    Martínez-Azorín, Francisco
    Burgon, Patrick G.
    Bönnemann, Carsten G.
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    Abstract
    Striated muscle needs to maintain cellular homeostasis in adaptation to increases in physiological and metabolic demands. Failure to do so can result in rhabdomyolysis. The identification of novel genetic conditions associated with rhabdomyolysis helps to shed light on hitherto unrecognized homeostatic mechanisms. Here we report seven individuals in six families from different ethnic backgrounds with biallelic variants in MLIP, which encodes the muscular lamin A/C-interacting protein, MLIP. Patients presented with a consistent phenotype characterized by mild muscle weakness, exercise-induced muscle pain, variable susceptibility to episodes of rhabdomyolysis, and persistent basal elevated serum creatine kinase levels. The biallelic truncating variants were predicted to result in disruption of the nuclear localizing signal of MLIP. Additionally, reduced overall RNA expression levels of the predominant MLIP isoform were observed in patients' skeletal muscle. Collectively, our data increase the understanding of the genetic landscape of rhabdomyolysis to now include MLIP as a novel disease gene in humans and solidifies MLIP's role in normal and diseased skeletal muscle homeostasis.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85119322555&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab275
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/28040
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    • Chemistry & Earth Sciences [‎601‎ items ]

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