POMK mutation in a family with congenital muscular dystrophy with merosin deficiency, hypomyelination, mild hearing deficit and intellectual disability

2014 
Background Congenital muscular dystrophies (CMD) with hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan are clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders that are often associated with brain malformations and eye defects. Presently, 16 proteins are known whose dysfunction impedes glycosylation of α-dystroglycan and leads to secondary dystroglycanopathy. Objective To identify the cause of CMD with secondary merosin deficiency, hypomyelination and intellectual disability in two siblings from a consanguineous family. Methods Autozygosity mapping followed by whole exome sequencing and immunochemistry were used to discover and verify a new genetic defect in two siblings with CMD. Results We identified a homozygous missense mutation (c.325C>T, p.Q109*) in protein O-mannosyl kinase (POMK) that encodes a glycosylation-specific kinase (SGK196) required for function of the dystroglycan complex. The protein was absent from skeletal muscle and skin fibroblasts of the patients. In patient muscle, β-dystroglycan was normally expressed at the sarcolemma, while α-dystroglycan failed to do so. Further, we detected co-localisation of POMK with desmin at the costameres in healthy muscle, and a substantial loss of desmin from the patient muscle. Conclusions Homozygous truncating mutations in POMK lead to CMD with secondary merosin deficiency, hypomyelination and intellectual disability. Loss of desmin suggests that failure of proper α-dystroglycan glycosylation impedes the binding to extracellular matrix proteins and also affects the cytoskeleton.
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