The consequences of null mutation are known for humans and
rodents in the case of
dystrophin,
utrophin, and α-dystrobrevin, and for nematode in the case of dystrophin and dystrobrevin. In human, the
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is a well-known muscle disease which highlights the importance of dystrophin/ dystrobrevin protein to function of muscle tissue. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a fatal progressive disease of both cardiac and skeletal muscle resulting from the
mutations in the DMD gene and loss of the protein dystrophin. The lack of dystrophin that causes Duchenne muscular dystrophy results in secondary loss of other dystrophin-complex components from the membrane. The loss of protein dystrophin ultimately leads to a lethal syndrome of skeletal and cardiac
myopathy, stationary night blindness, mental retardation, a cardiac-conduction defect, and a subtle smooth-muscle defect. Some of these traits are also found in a subset of the
limb-girdle muscular dystrophies that result from
sarcoglycan defects. α-Dystrobrevin proteins were found absent in a heart that is highly susceptible to injury during cardiac stress. The dystrobrevin loss resulted from a weakening of dystrophin's interaction with the membrane-bound dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, and lead to a significant loss of membrane integrity. == References ==