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Publication : Muscular degeneration in Duchenne's dystrophy may be caused by a mitochondrial defect.

First Author  Lucas-Heron B Year  1995
Journal  Med Hypotheses Volume  44
Issue  4 Pages  298-300
PubMed ID  7666833 Mgi Jnum  J:29600
Mgi Id  MGI:77127 Doi  10.1016/0306-9877(95)90184-1
Citation  Lucas-Heron B (1995) Muscular degeneration in Duchenne's dystrophy may be caused by a mitochondrial defect. Med Hypotheses 44(4):298-300
abstractText  Duchenne's dystrophy (DMD), a recessive chromosome X-related disease, is the most common and severe form of myopathy. The different theories (vascular, neurogenic, membraneous, calcic and auto-immune) formulated to account for this disease have not been swept away by the discovery of the DMD gene and the deficient protein, dystrophin, since the exact cellular role played by the latter is still unknown. Our work on skeletal muscle has demonstrated a mitochondrial deficiency of the calcium-specific protein, calmitine, in degenerating muscle of myopathic persons and animals. Considering its great affinity for calcium, this protein specific to skeletal muscle could be essential to mitochondrial calcium regulation and thus to the functioning of the entire muscle cell. Its deficiency in Duchenne's and Becker type muscular dystrophy could be due to a mitochondrial genome alteration solely accountable for muscular degeneration. This hypothesis challenges the supposedly essential but still undefined role that researchers have attributed to dystrophin.
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