How a Paternal Uniparental Isodisomy of Chromosome 17 Leads to Autosomal Recessive Limb-girdle Muscular Dystrophy R3
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Uniparental isodisomy is a condition where both chromosomes of a pair are inherited from one parental homologue. If a deleterious variant is present on the duplicated chromosome, its homozygosity can reveal an autosomal recessive disorder in the offspring of a heterozygous carrier. Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) R3 is an autosomal recessive inherited disease that is associated with alpha-sarcoglycan gene (SGCA) variants. We report the first published case of LGMDR3 due to a homozygous variant in SGCA unmasked by uniparental isodisomy. The patient is an 8-year-old who experienced delayed motor milestones but normal cognitive development. He presented with muscle pain and elevated plasma creatine kinase. Sequencing of the SGCA gene showed a homozygous pathogenic variant. Parents were not related and only the father was heterozygous for the pathogenic variant. A chromosomal microarray revealed a complete chromosome 17 copy number neutral loss of heterozygosity encompassing SGCA, indicating paternal uniparental isodisomy.
Mukai T, Kato S, Tanaka H, Kuroda Y, Kitaoka H, Ito A Mol Genet Genomic Med. 2024; 12(7):e2452.
PMID: 38967264 PMC: 11224963. DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.2452.