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GM23614 LCL from B-Lymphocyte

Description:

DIAPHYSEAL MEDULLARY STENOSIS WITH MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA

Affected:

Yes

Sex:

Male

Age:

60 YR (At Sampling)

  • Overview
  • Characterizations
  • Phenotypic Data
  • Publications
  • External Links
  • Culture Protocols

Overview

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Repository NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository
Subcollection Heritable Diseases
Biopsy Source Peripheral vein
Cell Type B-Lymphocyte
Tissue Type Blood
Transformant Epstein-Barr Virus
Sample Source LCL from B-Lymphocyte
Race White
Ethnicity Not Hispanic/Latino
Family Member 1
Family History N
Relation to Proband proband
Confirmation Clinical summary/Case history
Species Homo sapiens
Common Name Human
Remarks Clinically affected; several atraumatic fractures of right and left tibia and fibula at ages 14 and 15 years; developed proximal muscle weakness at age 29; cannot walk uphill; difficulty combing hair, lifting food to mouth, and getting out of low chairs; needs handrail to ascend stairs; fine hand movements are difficult; myopathic waddle, complete foot drop and exertional dyspnea; soft thin skin; three inguinal hernias; hair turned gray in his early 20s; weakness and wasting of paraspinal muscles, quadriceps, tibialis anterior, and gastrocnemius muscles; wasted triceps, biceps muscles, and thenar eminences; easy bruising-similar to von Willebrand; alkaline phosphatase level 62 U/L (30-130 U/L); creatine phosphokinase 171 U/L (20-220 U/L);echocardiogram reveals mild pulmonary stenosis; normal pulmonary function test; normal collagen study skin biopsy; left deltoid muscle biopsy showed no necrotic or regenerating fibers, no inflammatory infiltrates or structural abnormalities, results of special IHC studies were normal; EMG showed two different populations of motor units, some appearing myopathic and some normal, no evidence of denervation; muscle fiber recruitment increased except in paraspinal muscles where very little muscle remains; biceps were myopathic with short duration and small potentials; first dorsal interosseus muscle was short duration; vastus medialis and tibialis posterior were wasted but showed only mild change; normal immunological studies; skeletal survey shows patchy sclerotic changes in ilia and femora; fractures of femoral shafts appearing to be fatigue fractures; increase in cortical bone thickness, pronounced primary bone trabeculae, and over-tubulation not typical of Paget disease, osteogeneis imperfecta tarda, osteopetrosis or fibrous dysplasia; osteomalacia like changes present in addition to infarction within bone changes; spondylolisthesis at L3; histology of bone fragments from a fracture repair showed abnormal cortical bone with irregularly shaped spaces filled with fibrous tissue, some lined by osteoid and uneven distribution of osteocytes with the bone; no large Pagetic osteoclasts or cement (reversal) lines were present; two affected daughters- GM23610 and GM23612; two affected cousins- GM23620 and GM23622.

Characterizations

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IDENTIFICATION OF SPECIES OF ORIGIN Species of Origin Confirmed by LINE assay
 

Phenotypic Data

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Remarks Clinically affected; several atraumatic fractures of right and left tibia and fibula at ages 14 and 15 years; developed proximal muscle weakness at age 29; cannot walk uphill; difficulty combing hair, lifting food to mouth, and getting out of low chairs; needs handrail to ascend stairs; fine hand movements are difficult; myopathic waddle, complete foot drop and exertional dyspnea; soft thin skin; three inguinal hernias; hair turned gray in his early 20s; weakness and wasting of paraspinal muscles, quadriceps, tibialis anterior, and gastrocnemius muscles; wasted triceps, biceps muscles, and thenar eminences; easy bruising-similar to von Willebrand; alkaline phosphatase level 62 U/L (30-130 U/L); creatine phosphokinase 171 U/L (20-220 U/L);echocardiogram reveals mild pulmonary stenosis; normal pulmonary function test; normal collagen study skin biopsy; left deltoid muscle biopsy showed no necrotic or regenerating fibers, no inflammatory infiltrates or structural abnormalities, results of special IHC studies were normal; EMG showed two different populations of motor units, some appearing myopathic and some normal, no evidence of denervation; muscle fiber recruitment increased except in paraspinal muscles where very little muscle remains; biceps were myopathic with short duration and small potentials; first dorsal interosseus muscle was short duration; vastus medialis and tibialis posterior were wasted but showed only mild change; normal immunological studies; skeletal survey shows patchy sclerotic changes in ilia and femora; fractures of femoral shafts appearing to be fatigue fractures; increase in cortical bone thickness, pronounced primary bone trabeculae, and over-tubulation not typical of Paget disease, osteogeneis imperfecta tarda, osteopetrosis or fibrous dysplasia; osteomalacia like changes present in addition to infarction within bone changes; spondylolisthesis at L3; histology of bone fragments from a fracture repair showed abnormal cortical bone with irregularly shaped spaces filled with fibrous tissue, some lined by osteoid and uneven distribution of osteocytes with the bone; no large Pagetic osteoclasts or cement (reversal) lines were present; two affected daughters- GM23610 and GM23612; two affected cousins- GM23620 and GM23622.

Publications

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Mehta SG, Watts GD, McGillivray B, Mumm S, Hamilton SJ, Ramdeen S, Novack D, Briggs C, Whyte MP, Kimonis VE, Manifestations in a family with autosomal dominant bone fragility and limb-girdle myopathy American journal of medical genetics Part A140:322-30 2006
PubMed ID: 16419137
 
Watts GD, Mehta SG, Zhao C, Ramdeen S, Hamilton SJ, Novack DV, Mumm S, Whyte MP, Mc Gillivray B, Kimonis VE, Mapping autosomal dominant progressive limb-girdle myopathy with bone fragility to chromosome 9p21-p22: a novel locus for a musculoskeletal syndrome Human genetics118:508-14 2005
PubMed ID: 16244874
 
HENRY EW, AUCKLAND NL, McINTOSH HW, STARR DE, Abnormality of the long bones and progressive muscular dystrophy in a family Canadian Medical Association journal78:331-6 1958
PubMed ID: 13511301

External Links

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NCBI Gene Gene ID:8008
NCBI GTR 112250 DIAPHYSEAL MEDULLARY STENOSIS WITH MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA; DMSMFH
OMIM 112250 DIAPHYSEAL MEDULLARY STENOSIS WITH MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA; DMSMFH
Omim Description BDMF
  BONE DYSPLASIA WITH MEDULLARY FIBROSARCOMA
  HEREDITARY BONE DYSPLASIA WITH MALIGNANT FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMA

Culture Protocols

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Split Ratio 1:3
Temperature 37 C
Percent CO2 5%
Percent O2 AMBIENT
Medium Roswell Park Memorial Institute Medium 1640 with 2mM L-glutamine or equivalent
Serum 15% fetal bovine serum Not Inactivated
Substrate None specified
Subcultivation Method dilution - add fresh medium
Supplement -
Pricing
International/Commercial/For-profit:
$373.00USD
U.S. Academic/Non-profit/Government:
$216.00USD
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