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Michael Wehner, Paula R. Clemens, Andrew G. Engel, Manfred W. Killmann, REPORTS: Human muscle glycogenosis due to phosphorylase kinase deficiency associated with a nonsense mutation in the muscle isoform of the α subunit, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 3, Issue 11, November 1994, Pages 1983–1987, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/3.11.1983
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Abstract
Heritable phosphorylase kinase (Phk) deficiency is responsible for several forms of glycogen storage disease in humans and animals that differ in mode of Inheritance and tissue-specificity. Mutations affecting different subunits and isoforms of Phk are expected to contribute to this heterogeneity. In the present study, we have investigated a case of muscle-specific, adultonset Phk deficiency. The coding sequences of three candidate genes were analyzed by RT-PCR and sequencing: the muscle Isoform of the α subunit (αM), a muscle-specifically expressed exon of the β subunit, and the muscle Isoform of the y subunit. Whereas the latter two sequences were found to be normal, we identified a nonsense mutation in αM. The condition of this patient therefore is a human homolog of the Xlinked muscle Phk deficiency of I-strain mice. To our knowledge, this is the first description of a human Phk deficiency mutation.