Clinical utility of RNA sequencing to resolve unusual GNE myopathy with a novel promoter deletion.

Journal: Muscle & Nerve
Published:
Abstract

Introduction: UDP N-acetylglucosamine2-epimerase/N-acetylmannosamine-kinase (GNE) gene mutations can cause mostly autosomal-recessive myopathy with juvenile-onset known as hereditary inclusion-body myopathy (HIBM).

Methods: We describe a family of a patient showing an unusual HIBM with both vacuolar myopathy and myositis without quadriceps-sparing, hindering diagnosis. We show how genetic testing with functional assays, clinical transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) in particular, helped facilitate both the diagnosis and a better understanding of the genotype-phenotype relationship.

Results: We identified a novel 7.08 kb pathogenic deletion upstream of GNE using array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) and a common Val727Met variant. Using RNA-seq, we found only monoallelic (Val727Met-allele) expression, leading to ~50% GNE reduction in muscle. Importantly, α-dystroglycan is hypoglycosylated in the patient muscle, suggesting HIBM could be a "dystroglycanopathy."

Conclusions: Our study shows the importance of considering aCGH for GNE-myopathies, and the potential of RNA-seq for faster, definitive molecular diagnosis of unusual myopathies. Muscle Nerve, 2019.

Authors
Samya Chakravorty, Kiera Berger, Dalia Arafat, Babi Ramesh Nallamilli, Hari Subramanian, Soumya Joseph, Mary Anderson, Kevin Campbell, Jonathan Glass, Greg Gibson, Madhuri Hegde
Relevant Conditions

Inclusion Body Myopathy 2