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Symbol report for DMWD

HGNC data for DMWD

Approved symbol
DMWD
Approved name

DM1 locus, WD repeat containing

Locus type
gene with protein product
HGNC ID
HGNC:2936
Symbol status
Approved
Previous names
dystrophia myotonica-containing WD repeat motif
dystrophia myotonica, WD repeat containing
Alias symbols
DMR-N9
gene59
D19S593E
Chromosomal location
19q13.32
UCSC
Alliance of Genome Resources
Bos taurus
DMWD VGNC:97261 VGNC
Canis familiaris
DMWD VGNC:111436 VGNC
Equus caballus
DMWD VGNC:97701 VGNC
Macaca mulatta
DMWD VGNC:111959 VGNC
Mus musculus
Dmwd MGI:94907 Curated
Pan troglodytes
DMWD VGNC:14843 VGNC
Rattus norvegicus
Sus scrofa
DMWD VGNC:96978 VGNC
Myotonic dystrophy type 1: role of CCG, CTC and CGG interruptions within DMPK alleles in the pathogenesis and molecular diagnosis.
Santoro M et al. Clin Genet 2017 Oct;92(4)355-364
Santoro M, Masciullo M, Silvestri G, Novelli G, Botta A.
Clin Genet 2017 Oct;92(4)355-364
Abstract: Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is a multisystem neuromuscular disease caused by a CTG triplet expansion in the 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR) of DMPK gene. This CTG array is usually uninterrupted in both healthy and DM1 patients, but recent studies identified pathological variant expansions containing unstable CCG, CTC and CGG interruptions with a prevalence of 3-5% of cases. In this review, we will describe the clinical, molecular and genetic issues related to the occurrence of variant expansions associated with DM1. Indeed, the identification of these complex DMPK alleles leads to practical consequences in DM1 genetic counseling and testing, because these exams can give false negative results. Moreover, DM1 patients carrying interrupted alleles can manifest either additional atypical neurological symptoms or, conversely, mild, late-onset forms. Therefore, the prognosis of the disease in these patients is difficult to determine because of the great uncertainty about the genotype-phenotype correlations. We will discuss the putative effects of the variant DM1 alleles on the pathogenic disease mechanisms, including mitotic and meiotic repeats instability and splicing alteration typical of DM1 tissues. Interruptions within the DMPK expanded alleles could also interfere with the chromatin structure, the transcriptional activity of the DM1 locus and the interaction with RNA CUG-binding proteins.
Characterization of the myotonic dystrophy region predicts multiple protein isoform-encoding mRNAs.
Jansen G et al. Nat Genet 1992 Jul;1(4)261-266
Jansen G, Mahadevan M, Amemiya C, Wormskamp N, Segers B, Hendriks W, O'Hoy K, Baird S, Sabourin L, Lennon G.
Nat Genet 1992 Jul;1(4)261-266
Abstract: The mutation underlying myotonic dystrophy (DM) has been identified as an expansion of a polymorphic CTG-repeat in a gene encoding protein kinase activity. Brain and heart transcripts of the DM-kinase (DMR-B15) gene are subject to alternative RNA splicing in both human and mouse. The unstable [CTG]5-30 motif is found uniquely in humans, although the flanking nucleotides are also present in mouse. Characterization of the DM region of both species reveals another active gene (DMR-N9) in close proximity to the kinase gene. DMR-N9 transcripts, mainly expressed in brain and testis, possess a single, large open reading frame, but the function of its protein product is unknown. Clinical manifestation of DM may be caused by the expanded CTG-repeat compromising the (alternative) expression of DM-kinase or DMR-N9 proteins.