Dysferlin is a plasma membrane protein and is expressed early in human development

LVB Anderson, K Davison, JA Moss… - Human molecular …, 1999 - academic.oup.com
LVB Anderson, K Davison, JA Moss, C Young, MJ Cullen, J Walsh, MA Johnson, R Bashir…
Human molecular genetics, 1999academic.oup.com
Recently, a single gene, DYSF, has been identified which is mutated in patients with limb-
girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B (LGMD2B) and with Miyoshi myopathy (MM). This is of
interest because these diseases have been considered as two distinct clinical conditions
since different muscle groups are the initial targets. Dysferlin, the protein product of the
gene, is a novel molecule without homology to any known mammalian protein. We have
now raised a monoclonal antibody to dysferlin and report on the expression of this new …
Abstract
Recently, a single gene, DYSF, has been identified which is mutated in patients with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B (LGMD2B) and with Miyoshi myopathy (MM). This is of interest because these diseases have been considered as two distinct clinical conditions since different muscle groups are the initial targets. Dysferlin, the protein product of the gene, is a novel molecule without homology to any known mammalian protein. We have now raised a monoclonal antibody to dysferlin and report on the expression of this new protein: immunolabelling with the antibody (designated NCL-hamlet) demonstrated a polypeptide of ∼230 kDa on western blots of skeletal muscle, with localization to the muscle fibre membrane by microscopy at both the light and electron microscopic level. A specific loss of dysferlin labelling was observed in patients with mutations in the LGMD2B/MM gene. Furthermore, patients with two different frame-shifting mutations demonstrated very low levels of immunoreactive protein in a manner reminiscent of the dystrophin expressed in many Duchenne patients. Analysis of human fetal tissue showed that dysferlin was expressed at the earliest stages of development examined, at Carnegie stage 15 or 16 (embryonic age 5–6 weeks). Dysferlin is present, therefore, at a time when the limbs start to show regional differentiation. Lack of dysferlin at this critical time may contribute to the pattern of muscle involvement that develops later, with the onset of a muscular dystrophy primarily affecting proximal or distal muscles.
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