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Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

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Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Curtis Kendall December 5, 2006 Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Facts DMD affects mostly males at a rate of 1 in 3,500 births. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy


1
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
  • Curtis Kendall
  • December 5, 2006

2
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Facts
  • DMD affects mostly males at a rate of 1 in 3,500
    births.
  • There are over 200 types of mutations that can
    cause any one of the forms of muscular dystrophy.
  • There are also mutations that occur within the
    same gene that cause other disease types.
  • DMD is the most severe and common type of
    muscular dystrophy.
  • DMD is characterized by the wasting away of
    muscles.
  • DMD is the most aggressive form of muscular
    dystrophy.
  • Diagnosis in boys usually occurs between 16
    months and 8 years.
  • Parents are usually the first to notice problem.
  • Death from DMD usually occurs by age of 30.

3
Clinical FeaturesGenotype of DMD
  • Females carry the DMD gene on the X chromosome.
  • Females are carriers and have a 50 chance of
    transmitting the disease in each pregnancy.
  • Sons who inherit the mutation will have the
    disease.
  • Daughters that inherit the mutation will be
    carriers.
  • The DMD gene is located on the Xp 21 band of the
    X chromosome.
  • Mutations which affect the DMD gene.
  • 96 are frameshift mutations
  • 30 are new mutations
  • 10-20 of new mutations occur in the gametocyte
    (sex cell, will be pass on to the next
    generation).
  • The most common mutation are repeats of the CAG
    nucleotides.

4
Genotype of DMD(Cont.)
  • During the translocation process, a mutation
    occurs.
  • Mutations leading to the absence of dystrophin
  • Very Large Deletions (lead to absence of
    dystrophin)
  • Mutations causing reading errors (causes a
    degraded, low functioning DMD protein molecule)
  • Stop mutation
  • Splicing mutation
  • Duplication
  • Deletion
  • Point Mutations

5
Clinical FeaturesPhenotype of DMD
  • Delays in early childhood stages involving muscle
    use, in 42 of patients.
  • Delays in standing alone
  • Delays in sitting without aid
  • Delays in walking (12 to 24 months)
  • Toe walking or flat footednees.
  • Child has a hard time climbing.
  • Learning difficulties in 5 of patients.
  • Speech problems in 3 of patients.
  • Leg and calf pain.
  • Mental development is impaired. IQs usually
    below 75 points.
  • Memory problems
  • Carrying out daily functions
  • Increase in bone fractures due to the decrease in
    bone density.
  • Increase in serum CK (creatine phosphokinase)
    levels up to 10 times normal amounts.
  • Wheelchair bound by 12 years of age.
  • Cardiomyopathy at 14 to 18 years.
  • Few patients live beyond 30 years of age.
  • Reparatory problems and cardiomyopathy leading to
    congestive heart failure are the usual cause of
    death.

6
Molecular Makeup
  • There are 79 exons which makeup 0.6 of the
    entire gene.
  • There are 8 promoters (binding sights).
  • Introns make up 99.4 of the entire gene.
  • Genomic DNA 2.2 million base pairs.
  • N-terminal or actin binding sight binds
    dystrophin to membranes surrounding striated
    muscle fiber.
  • Rod Domain contains 24 proteins that repeat and
    maintain molecular structure.
  • It is thought to give the rod its flexibility.
  • The main rod is interrupted by 4 hinge regions.
  • The cysteine-rich domain regulates ADAM protease
    which are cell membrane anchors that are
    important in maintaining cell shape and
    structure.
  • The C-terminal contains the syntrophin binding
    sight (for binding internal cellular components)

7
DMD Gene and DystrophinFunction
  • The DMD gene encodes for the protein dystrophin,
    found in muscle cells and some neurons.
  • Dystrophin provides strength to muscle cells by
    linking the internal cytoskeleton to the surface
    membrane.
  • Without this structural support, the cell
    membrane becomes permeable. As components from
    outside the cell are allowed to enter the
    internal pressure of the cell increases until the
    cell bursts and dies.
  • Under normal wear and tear stem cells within the
    muscle regenerate new muscle cells and repair the
    damage.
  • In DMD the damage to muscle cells is so extreme
    that the supply of stem cells are exhausted and
    repair can no longer occur.

8
Allelic Variants
Disease Mutation Effect of Mutation Phenotype
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Very Large Deletions caused by Stop mutations Splicing mutations Deletions Duplications Severely Functionally Impaired Dystrophin Protein As Discussed In Prior Slides
Becker Muscular Dystrophy Deletion or Duplication That Change In-Frame Exons Creates A Protein That Is Partially Functional Same As But Less Sever Then DMD But Onset At Greater Then 7 Years Old
DMD Related Dilated Cardiomyopathy Effects The Cardiac Muscle Promoter and The First Exon No Dystrophin Transcriptions Being Carried Out In Cardiac Muscle Tachycardia (Fat Heart Beat) Leads To Congestive Hear Failure
Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy In Gene That Encodes Scarcoglycans and Other Proteins of Muscle Cells Decrease In Scarcoglycans Proteins Pelvic and Shoulder Girdle Can Look Like DMD or BMD
9
Allelic Variants(Cont.)
Disease Mutation Effect of Mutation Phenotype
Proximal Myotonic Myopathy Repeats In The Gene That Encodes For Zinc Finger Protein 9 Lack of Zinc Finger Protein 9 Causes Weakness In Muscle Cells Stiffness or Pain In Limb Girdle Distribution
Myotonic Dystrophy Increase In CTG Nucleotide Repeats Repeats of CTG Cause Neurological Disorders Frontal Balding, Cataracts, Diabetes, Distal Limb Weakness
Emery-Dreifuss Muscular Dystrophy (EDMD) EMD That Codes For Emerin and LMNA Which Codes For Lamins A Lack of Specificity of The Dystrophic Changes Observed. Joint Contractures Leading To Muscle Weakness and Wasting Usually Some Cardiac Involvement
Spinal Muscular Atrophy Mutation In The SMN Gene Degeneration of Motor Neurons Which Are Nerve Cells In The Spinal Cord. Poor Muscle Tone, Absence of Deep Tendon Reflexes
10
3D Images of The Actin Binding Sight Of Dystrophin
11
Bibliography
  • OMIM
  • MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY, DUCHENNE TYPE DMD310200
    http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/dispomim.cgi?id
    310200
  • DYSTROPHIN DMD
  • 300377 http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/dispomi
    m.cgi?cmdentryid300377
  • Bookshelf
  • Genes and disease. Bethesda (MD) National
    Library of Medicine
  • Introduction to Genetic Analysis. 7th ed.
    Griffiths, Anthony J.F. Miller, Jeffrey H.
    Suzuki, David T. Lewontin, Richard C. Gelbart,
    William M. New York c1999.
  • Human Molecular Genetics 2 2nd ed. Strachan, Tom
    and Read, Andrew P. New York and London c1999
  • GeneReviews Editor-in-chief Pagon, Roberta A.
    Associate editors Cassidy, Suzanne B. Bird,
    Thomas C. Dinulos, Mary Beth Feldman, Gerald
    L. Smith, Richard J.H. Dolan, Cynthia R.
    Technical editor Baskin, Patricia K. Seattle
    (WA) University of Washington 1993-2006

12
Bibliography (Cont.)
  • PubMed
  • Houben F, Ramaekers FC, Snoeckx LH, Broers JL.
  • Role of nuclear lamina-cytoskeleton interactions
    in the maintenance of cellular strength.
  • Biochim Biophys Acta. 2006 Sep 19
  • Maeda M, Nakao S, Miyazato H, Setoguchi M, Arima
    S, Higuchi I, Osame M, Taira A, Nomoto K, Toda H.
  • Cardiac dystrophin abnormalities in Becker
    muscular dystrophy assessed by endomyocardial
    biopsy.
  • Am Heart J. 1995 Apr
  • Kanagawa M, Toda T.
  • The genetic and molecular basis of muscular
    dystrophy roles of cell-matrix linkage in the
    pathogenesis.
  • J Hum Genet. 2006 Sep 13
  • Beroud C, Tuffery-Giraud S, Matsuo M, Hamroun D,
    Humbertclaude V, Monnier N, Moizard MP, Voelckel
    MA, Calemard LM, Boisseau P, Blayau M, Philippe
    C, Cossee M, Pages M, Rivier F, Danos O, Garcia
    L, Claustres M
  • Multiexon skipping leading to an artificial DMD
    protein lacking amino acids from exon 45 through
    55 could rescue up to 63 of patients with
    Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
  • Hum Mutat. 2006 Oct 13
  • Ervasti JM.
  • Dystrophin, its interactions with other proteins,
    and implications for muscular dystrophy.
  • Biochim Biophys Acta. 2006 Jun 7
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