Aberrations in Energetic Metabolism and Stress-Related Pathways Contribute to Pathophysiology in the Neb Conditional Knockout Mouse Model of Nemaline Myopathy

能量代谢和应激相关途径的异常导致 Neb 条件性基因敲除小鼠模型的杆状体肌病病理生理学

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作者:Rebecca A Slick, Jennifer A Tinklenberg, Jessica Sutton, Liwen Zhang, Hui Meng, Margaret J Beatka, Mark Vanden Avond, Mariah J Prom, Emily Ott, Federica Montanaro, James Heisner, Rafael Toro, Henk Granzier, Aron M Geurts, David F Stowe, R Blake Hill, Michael W Lawlor

Abstract

Nemaline myopathy (NM) is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous disease that is diagnosed on the basis of the presence of nemaline rods on skeletal muscle biopsy. Although NM has typically been classified by causative genes, disease severity or prognosis cannot be predicted. The common pathologic end point of nemaline rods (despite diverse genetic causes) and an unexplained range of muscle weakness suggest that shared secondary processes contribute to the pathogenesis of NM. We speculated that these processes could be identified through a proteome-wide interrogation using a mouse model of severe NM in combination with pathway validation and structural/functional analyses. A proteomic analysis was performed using skeletal muscle tissue from the Neb conditional knockout mouse model compared with its wild-type counterpart to identify pathophysiologically relevant biological processes that might impact disease severity or provide new treatment targets. A differential expression analysis and Ingenuity Pathway Core Analysis predicted perturbations in several cellular processes, including mitochondrial dysfunction and changes in energetic metabolism and stress-related pathways. Subsequent structural and functional studies demonstrated abnormal mitochondrial distribution, decreased mitochondrial respiratory function, an increase in mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and extremely low ATP content in Neb conditional knockout muscles relative to wild type. Overall, the findings of these studies support a role for severe mitochondrial dysfunction as a novel contributor to muscle weakness in NM.

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