Published 2009
| Version v1
Publication
Clinical features and molecular modelling of novel MPZ mutations in demyelinating and axonal neuropathies
Description
Mutations in the myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene have been associated with different Charcot–Marie–
Tooth disease (CMT) phenotypes, including classical demyelinating CMT1B and the axonal form of the
disease (CMT2). The MPZ role in the pathogenesis of both demyelinating and axonal inherited
neuropathies was evaluated in the Italian population by screening a cohort of 214 patients with CMT1
or CMT2. A MPZ mutation frequency of 7.9% in demyelinating cases and of 4.8% in axonal cases was
observed. In the total cohort (264 patients), including those with mutations in other genes, a mutation
frequency of 5.8% (7/121) in demyelinating cases and 4.2% (6/143) in axonal cases was found. Three
novel MPZ mutations, two missense (p.Ser111Cys, p.Thr124Ala) and one frameshift (p.Tyr145fs) were
found, and a molecular modelling approach was used to test the effects of these mutations on the protein
structure. Electrostatic distribution changes within the protein, caused by the amino acid substitution, fit in
with phenotypes presented by patients herein described. Our findings suggest that the clinical features
associated with MPZ mutations depend partly on the nature of amino acid change and that molecular
modelling may provide useful support, based on effects on secondary and tertiary protein structure, to
predict the phenotype associated with MPZ mutations.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/222027
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/222027
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE