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April 10, 2001; 56 (7) Article

A new mutation in a family with cold-aggravated myotonia disrupts Na+ channel inactivation

F.–F. Wu, M.P. Takahashi, E. Pegoraro, C. Angelini, P. Colleselli, S.C. Cannon, E.P. Hoffman
First published April 10, 2001, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.56.7.878
F.–F. Wu
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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M.P. Takahashi
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
MD, PhD
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E. Pegoraro
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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C. Angelini
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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P. Colleselli
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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S.C. Cannon
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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E.P. Hoffman
From the Department of Human Genetics (F.-F. Wu), University of Pittsburgh, PA; Departments of Neurology (Drs. Takahashi and Cannon) and Neurobiology (Dr. Cannon), Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Neuromuscular Unit, Department of Neurological and Psychiatric Sciences (Drs. Pegoraro and Angelini), University of Padova, Italy; Division of Pediatrics (Dr. Colleselli), ULSS n.1 Belluno Agordo Cadore, O.C. di Belluno, Belluno, Italy; and the Research Center for Genetic Medicine (F.-F. Wu and Dr. Hoffman), Children’s National Medical Center, Washington, DC.
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Citation
A new mutation in a family with cold-aggravated myotonia disrupts Na+ channel inactivation
F.–F. Wu, M.P. Takahashi, E. Pegoraro, C. Angelini, P. Colleselli, S.C. Cannon, E.P. Hoffman
Neurology Apr 2001, 56 (7) 878-884; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.56.7.878

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Abstract

Objective: To identify the molecular and physiologic abnormality in familial myotonia with cold sensitivity, hypertrophy, and no weakness.

Background: Sodium channel mutations were previously identified as the cause of several allelic disorders with varying combinations of myotonia and periodic paralysis. A three-generation family with dominant myotonia aggravated by cooling, but no weakness, was screened for mutations in the skeletal muscle sodium channel α-subunit gene (SCN4A).

Methods: Single-strand conformation polymorphism was used to screen all 24 exons of SCN4A and abnormal conformers were sequenced to confirm the presence of mutations. The functional consequence of a SCN4A mutation was explored by recording sodium currents from human embryonic kidney cells transiently transfected with an expression construct that was mutated to reproduce the genetic defect.

Results: A three-generation Italian family with myotonia is presented, in which a novel SCN4A mutation (leucine 266 substituted by valine, L266V) is identified. This change removes only a single methylene group from the 1,836-amino-acid protein, and is present in a region of the protein previously not known to be critical for channel function (domain I transmembrane segment 5). Electrophysiologic studies of the L266V mutation showed defects in fast inactivation, consistent with other disease-causing SCN4A mutations studied to date. Slow inactivation was not impaired.

Conclusions: This novel mutation of the sodium channel indicates that a single carbon change in a transmembrane α-helix of domain I can alter channel inactivation and cause cold-sensitive myotonia.

  • Received May 24, 2000.
  • Accepted in final form December 13, 2000.
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