Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a pharmacogenetic disorder of skeletal muscle that is triggered in genetically predisposed individuals by common anesthetics and muscle relaxants. The ryanodine receptor (RYR1) is mutated in a number of MH pedigrees, some members of which also have central core disease (CCD), an inherited myopathy closely associated with MH. Mutation screening of 6 kb of the RYR1 gene has identified four adjacent novel mutations, C6487T, G6488A, G6502A, and C6617T, which result in the amino acid alterations Arg2163Cys, Arg2163His, Val2168Met, and Thr2206Met, respectively. Collectively, these mutations account for 11% of MH cases and identify the gene segment 6400-6700 as a mutation hot spot. Correlation analysis of the in vitro contracture-test data available for pedigrees bearing these and other RYR1 mutations showed an exceptionally good correlation between caffeine threshold and tension values, whereas no correlation was observed between halothane threshold and tension values. This finding has important ramifications for assignment of the MH-susceptible phenotype, in genotyping studies, and indicates that assessment of recombinant individuals on the basis of caffeine response is justified, whereas assessment on the basis of halothane response may be problematic. Interestingly, the data suggest a link between the caffeine threshold and tension values and the MH/CCD phenotype.
Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is an autosomal dominant disorder which is potentially lethal in susceptible individuals on exposure to commonly used inhalational anaesthetics and depolarising muscle relaxants. Crises reflect the consequences of disturbed skeletal muscle calcium homeostasis. Susceptibility was first localised to chromosome 19q13.1 and the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor, RYR1 (the calcium release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum). Defects in this gene have been identified which cosegregate with the MHS phenotype and evidence as to their potential causal roles has accumulated. MH has, however, been shown to be genetically heterogeneous, additional loci on chromosomes 3q, 17q and 7q being proposed. Pedigrees remain in Europe where linkage status is still unclear. In a collaborative search of the human genome conducted with three pedigrees whose disease status was classified according to the European IVCT protocol we have evidence to suggest that at least two further loci exist for MH susceptibility. One of these locates to chromosome 1q, the site of a candidate gene, CACNL1A3, encoding the alpha-subunit of the dihydropyridine receptor. The second region resides on chromosome 5p to where no known candidate has been mapped to date. The third family exhibited inconclusive results which suggests the existence of at least one other locus. This study adds to the evidence for considerable genetic heterogeneity in MH and will provide a route to further our understanding of the molecular pathology of the condition.
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