Molecular Diagnosis in 100% of Dystrophinopathies
Are We There Yet?
Citation Manager Formats
Make Comment
See Comments

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is experiencing its renaissance. After being the first muscular dystrophy in which the disease gene has been identified, it is now the first muscular dystrophy to be treated, in some cases, with personalized, dystrophin-restoring therapy.1 In spite of these tremendous advancements in the treatment of DMD, in this issue of Neurology® Genetics, Waddel et al.2 represent the challenges in achieving a genetic diagnosis in a cohort of male patients with elevated serum creatine kinase, dystrophin protein studies suggesting an underlying dystrophinopathy, yet normal multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and exomic sequencing.
The authors combined omic and bioinformatic analyses to identify causative mutations in their small cohort of undiagnosed patients. This is an important, well-designed, and timely study, which through intelligent use of updated omic resources and experimental data addresses several important issues in the field of dystrophinopathies.
First, the importance to achieve a molecular diagnosis in any suspected dystrophinopathy to allow patients to access potential therapies and families to receive appropriate genetic counselling. Although most of the currently available therapies to restore dystrophin expression (bioactive molecules that modulate the translation machinery reading through premature stop codons during messenger RNA [mRNA] translation, or treating RNA expression with antisense oligonucleotides) are not amenable to this cohort of patients harboring large structural rearrangements of the DMD gene, the foreseen availability of gene therapy potentially targeted to any DMD patients, regardless of the DMD mutation is emerging and likely it will deeply impact prognosis.1,3 Under these premises, the achievement of the molecular diagnosis in DMD is of a foremost relevance. The experimental approach used by Waddel et al.2 demonstrates also the relevance of muscle biopsy in selected cases of unsolved muscular dystrophy. DMD mRNA isolated from skeletal muscle tissue will allow the localization of sequence anomalies in the transcript pointing to deep intronic causative mutations. Indeed, only the complementary use of genome sequencing, transcriptomics, and dystrophin protein studies have allowed a successful mutation identification in this cohort of patients.
Second, the authors attempted to define the amount of full-length dystrophin capable to rescue clinical phenotype using the remnant levels of normally spliced dystrophin DMD mRNA in patients with complex splicing mutations. The vexata quaestio “how much dystrophin is enough?” is now receiving a new answer.
It is well known that dystrophin is the strongest genetic modifier of the phenotype in the clinical spectrum of dystrophinopathies. If everybody agrees that “the more the better,” more controversies emerge to define the minimum amount necessary to be clinically relevant. Preclinical and single patient reports suggest that 15%–20% homogeneous dystrophin expression is sufficient to completely protect against eccentric contraction-induced injury, but still the debate is active.4,5 Waddel et al. using skeletal muscle biopsies reveals that normal dystrophin level ∼15 ± 2% correlates to the milder spectrum of dystrophinopathies (i.e., myalgia without overt weakness), ∼10 ± 2% levels of dystrophin predicts a Becker muscular dystrophy phenotype with mild weakness and cardiac involvement, and 0%–5% levels of dystrophin results in severe Becker muscular dystrophy or DMD.2 These predictions are in line with early studies in which level of dystrophin 29%–57% of normal was shown to be sufficient to avoid muscle weakness in X-linked dilated cardiomyopathy families.6 The novelty in the approach by Waddel et al is the estimate of normal dystrophin vs the amount of internally deleted dystrophin able to modulate the phenotype.1 In the latter case, not only the amount but also the deleted region of the dystrophin gene is relevant to predict phenotype. Indeed, different regions in dystrophin have variable significance for its function, and thus, the phenotype prediction remain more complex and likely less precise. Upcoming clinical studies in the field of gene therapy will show how this “qualitative” factor will interact with sheer dystrophin quantity to determine the efficacy of various “microdystrophins” engineered into AAV vectors.
This study has impact for its translational implications in the emerging field of personalized medicine in dystrophinopathies and will help assessing the efficacy of dystrophin-restoring therapies.
Study Funding
The author reports no targeted funding.
Disclosure
No relevant disclosures. Go to Neurology.org/NG for full disclosure.
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org/NG for full disclosures. Funding information is provided at the end of the article.
See page e554
- Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND), which permits downloading and sharing the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.
References
- 1.↵
- 2.↵
- Waddel LB,
- Breyen SJ,
- Cummings BB, et al
- 3.↵
- Mendell JR,
- Sahenk Z,
- Lehman K, et al
- 4.↵
- 5.↵
- Todeschini A,
- Gualandi F,
- Trabanelli C, et al
- 6.↵
Letters: Rapid online correspondence
REQUIREMENTS
You must ensure that your Disclosures have been updated within the previous six months. Please go to our Submission Site to add or update your Disclosure information.
Your co-authors must send a completed Publishing Agreement Form to Neurology Staff (not necessary for the lead/corresponding author as the form below will suffice) before you upload your comment.
If you are responding to a comment that was written about an article you originally authored:
You (and co-authors) do not need to fill out forms or check disclosures as author forms are still valid
and apply to letter.
Submission specifications:
- Submissions must be < 200 words with < 5 references. Reference 1 must be the article on which you are commenting.
- Submissions should not have more than 5 authors. (Exception: original author replies can include all original authors of the article)
- Submit only on articles published within 6 months of issue date.
- Do not be redundant. Read any comments already posted on the article prior to submission.
- Submitted comments are subject to editing and editor review prior to posting.
You May Also be Interested in
Dr. Nicole Sur and Dr. Mausaminben Hathidara
► Watch
Related Articles
Topics Discussed
Alert Me
Recommended articles
-
Article
WGS and RNA Studies Diagnose Noncoding DMD Variants in Males With High Creatine KinaseLeigh B. Waddell, Samantha J. Bryen, Beryl B. Cummings et al.Neurology: Genetics, January 29, 2021 -
Articles
Genetic and biochemical normalization in female carriers of Duchenne muscular dystrophyEvidence for failure of dystrophin production in dystrophin-competent myonucleiE. Pegoraro, R. N. Schimke, C. Garcia et al.Neurology, April 01, 1995 -
ARTICLES
Cognitive dysfunction as the major presenting feature of Becker's muscular dystrophyK. N. North, G. Miller, S. T. Iannaccone et al.Neurology, February 01, 1996 -
Article
Increased dystrophin production with golodirsen in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophyDiane E. Frank, Frederick J. Schnell, Cody Akana et al.Neurology, March 05, 2020