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Springer Nature [academic journals on nature.com], European Journal of Human Genetics, 4(6), p. 396-399, 1998

DOI: 10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200197

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Severe limb girdle muscular dystrophy in Spanish gypsies: Further evidence for a founder mutation in the γ-sarcoglycan gene

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2C (LGMD2C) is an autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy with primary gamma-sarcoglycan deficiency, generally associated with a severe clinical course. gamma-sarcoglycan, a 35kDa dystrophin-associated protein, is encoded by a single gene on chromosome 13q12. Six different mutations have been described in that gene, and it has been proved they are the origin of the disease. One of these mutations (C283Y), a G-->A transition in codon 283, was recently and exclusively identified in Gypsy patients from different European countries. We report the study of 11 LGMD2C unrelated Gypsy families (nine Spanish and two Portugese). The muscle biopsies of these patients showed a drastically decreased immunostaining with alpha and gamma-sarcoglycan antibodies. All the patients were homozygous for C283Y missense mutation, and all affected chromosomes (patients and heterozygous relatives) carried the allele 5 (112 bp) of the intragenic microsatellite D13S232. Unexpectedly, this allele is most frequent in the Caucasian population but not in the normal Gypsy population. The clinical severity of all patients demonstrates that the C283Y missense mutation in a homozygous state causes a severe LGMD2C (DMD-like). The elevated number of families ascertained let us assume that LGMD2C is prevalent in the Gypsy population, and that all the families have inherited a founding mutation.