Abstract

One cause of X-linked dilated cardiomyopathies is mutation of the dystrophin gene. We report the case of a young boy who suffered from dilated cardiomyopathy caused only by dystrophin-deficient cardiac muscle, but who did not present with any clinical signs of skeletal myopathy. Sequence analysis of the patient's dystrophin gene revealed the presence of a novel single point mutation at the first exon-intron boundary, inactivating the 5' splice site consensus sequence of the first intron. The lack of muscle weakness observed clinically can be explained by expression of the brain and Purkinje dystrophin isoforms in skeletal muscle.

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