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1.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a severe X-linked recessive disorder that results in progressive muscle degeneration, is due to a lack of dystrophin, a membrane cytoskeletal protein. An approach to the search for a treatment is to compensate for dystrophin loss by utrophin, another cytoskeletal protein. During development, in normal as in dystrophic embryos, utrophin is found at the membrane surface of immature skeletal fibres and is progressively replaced by dystrophin. Thus, it is possible to consider utrophin as a 'foetal homologue' of dystrophin. In a previous work, we studied the effect of L-arginine, the substrate of nitric oxide synthetase (NOS), on utrophin expression at the muscle membrane. Using a novel antibody, we confirm here that the immunocytochemical staining was indeed due to an increase in utrophin at the sarcolemma. The result is observed not only on mdx (an animal model of DMD) myotubes in culture but also in mdx mice treated with L-arginine. In addition, we show here the utrophin increase in muscle extracts of mdx mice treated with L-arginine, after electrophoretic separation and western-blotting using this novel antibody, and thus extending the electrophoretic results previously obtained on myotube cultures to muscles of treated mice.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Dystrophin, the protein product of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene, is deficient in patients with DMD and in mdx mice. It is immunocytochemically localized in skeletal muscle sarcolemma. However, little is known about the three-dimensional ultrastructural localization of dystrophin and its relationship with other cytoskeletal proteins. We found that dystrophin is localized irregularly, just underneath the plasma membrane in normal cultured mouse myotubes, by using the quick-freezing and deep-etching (QF-DE) method; it was found to be closely linked to actin-like filaments (8–10 nm in diameter), most of which were decorated with myosin subfragment 1, and was attached to the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane. These results suggest that dystrophin might play an important role in the preservation of cell membrane stability by connecting actin cytoskeletons with the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
In skeletal muscle cells, plasma membrane depolarization causes a rapid calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum through ryanodine receptors triggering contraction. In Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a lethal disease that is caused by the lack of the cytoskeletal protein dystrophin, the cytosolic calcium concentration is known to be increased, and this increase may lead to cell necrosis. Here, we used myotubes derived from control and mdx mice, the murine model of DMD, to study the calcium responses induced by nicotinic acetylcholine receptor stimulation. The photoprotein aequorin was expressed in the cytosol or targeted to the plasma membrane as a fusion protein with the synaptosome-associated protein SNAP-25, thus allowing calcium measurements in a restricted area localized just below the plasma membrane. The carbachol-induced calcium responses were 4.5 times bigger in dystrophic myotubes than in control myotubes. Moreover, in dystrophic myotubes the carbachol-mediated calcium responses measured in the subsarcolemmal area were at least 10 times bigger than in the bulk cytosol. The initial calcium responses were due to calcium influx into the cells followed by a fast refilling/release phase from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. In addition and unexpectedly, the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor pathway was involved in these calcium signals only in the dystrophic myotubes. This surprising involvement of this calcium release channel in the excitation-contraction coupling could open new ways for understanding exercise-induced calcium increases and downstream muscle degeneration in mdx mice and, therefore, in DMD.  相似文献   

4.
A lack of dystrophin results in muscle degeneration in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Dystrophin-deficient human and mouse muscle cells have higher resting levels of intracellular free calcium ([Ca2+]i) and show a related increase in single-channel open probabilities of calcium leak channels. Elevated [Ca2+]i results in high levels of calcium-dependent proteolysis, which in turn increases calcium leak channel activity. This process could initiate muscle degeneration by further increasing [Ca2+]i and proteolysis in a positive feedback loop. Here, we tested the direct effect of restoration of dystrophin on [Ca2+]i and channel activity in primary myotubes from mdx mice made transgenic for full-length dystrophin. Transgenic mdx mice have been previously shown to have normal dystrophin localization and no muscle degeneration. Fura-2 calcium measurements and single-channel patch recordings showed that resting [Ca2+]i levels and open probabilities of calcium leak channels of transgenic mdx myotubes were similar to normal levels and significantly lower than mdx littermate controls (mdx) that lack dystrophin. Thus, restoration of normal calcium regulation in transgenic mdx mice may underlie the resulting absence of degeneration.  相似文献   

5.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the severe X-linked recessive disorder which results in progressive muscle degeneration, is due to a lack of dystrophin, a membrane cytoskeletal protein. Three types of treatment are envisaged: pharmacological (glucocorticoid), myoblast transplantation, and gene therapy. An alternative to the pharmacological approach is to compensate for dystrophin loss by the upregulation of another cytoskeletal protein, utrophin. Utrophin and dystrophin are part of a complex of proteins and glycoproteins, which links the basal lamina to the cytoskeleton, thus ensuring the stability of the muscle membrane. One protein of the complex, syntrophin, is associated with a muscular isoform of the neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS). We have demonstrated an overexpression of utrophin, visualised by immunofluorescence and quantified by Western blotting, in normal myotubes and in mdx (the animal model of DMD) myotubes, as in normal (C57) and mdx mice, both treated with nitric oxide (NO) donor or L-arginine, the NOS substrate. There is evidence that utrophin may be capable of performing the same cellular functions as dystrophin and may functionally compensate for its lack. Thus, we propose to use NO donors, as palliative treatment of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies, pending, or in combination with, gene and/or cellular therapy. Discussion has focussed on the various isoforms of NOS that could be implicated in the regeneration process. Dystrophic and healthy muscles respond to treatment, suggesting that although NOS is delocalised in the cytoplasm in the case of DMD, it conserves substantial activity. eNOS present in mitochondria and iNOS present in cytoplasm and the neuromuscular junction could also be activated. Lastly, production of NO by endothelial NOS of the capillaries would also be beneficial through increased supply of metabolites and oxygen to the muscles.  相似文献   

6.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal disease caused by the lack of the cytoskeletal protein dystrophin. Altered calcium homoeostasis and increased calcium concentrations in dystrophic fibres may be responsible for the degeneration of muscle occurring in DMD. In the present study, we used subsarcolemmal- and mitochondrial-targeted aequorin to study the effect of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein overexpression on carbachol-induced near-plasma membrane and mitochondrial calcium responses in myotubes derived from control C57 and dystrophic (mdx) mice. We show that Bcl-2 overexpression decreases subsarcolemmal and mitochondrial calcium overload that occurs during activation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in dystrophic myotubes. Moreover, our results suggest that overexpressed Bcl-2 protein may prevent near-plasma membrane and mitochondrial calcium overload by inhibiting IP3Rs (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors), which we have shown previously to be involved in abnormal calcium homoeostasis in dystrophic myotubes. Most likely as a consequence, the inhibition of IP3R function by Bcl-2 also inhibits calcium-dependent apoptosis in these cells.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION: DMD (Duchenne muscular dystrophy) is a devastating X-linked disorder characterized by progressive muscle degeneration and weakness. The use of cell therapy for the repair of defective muscle is being pursued as a possible treatment for DMD. Mesenchymal stem cells have the potential to differentiate and display a myogenic phenotype in vitro. Since liposuctioned human fat is available in large quantities, it may be an ideal source of stem cells for therapeutic applications. ASCs (adipose-derived stem cells) are able to restore dystrophin expression in the muscles of mdx (X-linked muscular dystrophy) mice. However, the outcome when these cells interact with human dystrophic muscle is still unknown. RESULTS: We show here that ASCs participate in myotube formation when cultured together with differentiating human DMD myoblasts, resulting in the restoration of dystrophin expression. Similarly, dystrophin was induced when ASCs were co-cultivated with DMD myotubes. Experiments with GFP (green fluorescent protein)-positive ASCs and DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole)-stained DMD myoblasts indicated that ASCs participate in human myogenesis through cellular fusion. CONCLUSIONS: These results show that ASCs have the potential to interact with dystrophic muscle cells, restoring dystrophin expression of DMD cells in vitro. The possibility of using adipose tissue as a source of stem cell therapies for muscular diseases is extremely exciting.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Muscle rigidity and myotendinous junction (MTJ) deficiency contribute to immobilization in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a lethal disease caused by the absence of dystrophin. However, little is known about the muscle passive properties and MTJ strength in a diseased muscle. Here, we hypothesize that dystrophin-deficient muscle pathology renders skeletal muscle stiffer and MTJ weaker. To test our hypothesis, we examined the passive properties of an intact noncontracting muscle-tendon unit in mdx mice, a mouse model for DMD. The extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle-tendon preparations of 2-, 6-, 14-, and 20-mo-old mdx and normal control mice were strained stepwisely from 110% to 160% of the muscle optimal length. The stress-strain response and failure position were analyzed. In support of our hypothesis, the mdx EDL preparation consistently developed higher stress before muscle failure. Postfailure stresses decreased dramatically in mdx but not normal preparations. Further, mdx showed a significantly faster stress relaxation rate. Consistent with stress-strain assay results, we observed significantly higher fibrosis in mdx muscle. In 2- and 6-mo-old mdx and 20-mo-old BL10 mice failure occurred within the muscle (2- to 14-mo-old BL10 preparations did not fail). Interestingly, in ≥14-mo-old mdx mice the failure site shifted toward the MTJ. Electron microscopy revealed substantial MTJ degeneration in aged but not young mdx mice. In summary, our results suggest that the passive properties of the EDL muscle and the strength of MTJ are compromised in mdx in an age-dependent manner. These findings offer new insights in studying DMD pathogenesis and developing novel therapies.  相似文献   

10.
In Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), dystrophin mutation leads to progressive lethal skeletal muscle degeneration. For unknown reasons, dystrophin deficiency does not recapitulate DMD in mice (mdx), which have mild skeletal muscle defects and potent regenerative capacity. We postulated that human DMD progression is a consequence of loss of functional muscle stem cells (MuSC), and the mild mouse mdx phenotype results from greater MuSC reserve fueled by longer telomeres. We report that mdx mice lacking the RNA component of telomerase (mdx/mTR) have shortened telomeres in muscle cells and severe muscular dystrophy that progressively worsens with age. Muscle wasting severity parallels a decline in MuSC regenerative capacity and is ameliorated histologically by transplantation of wild-type MuSC. These data show that DMD progression results, in part, from a cell-autonomous failure of?MuSC to maintain the damage-repair cycle initiated by dystrophin deficiency. The essential role of MuSC function has therapeutic implications for DMD.  相似文献   

11.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most common lethal genetic disorder in children, is an X-linked recessive muscle disease characterized by the absence of dystrophin at the sarcolemma of muscle fibers. We examined a putative endometrial progenitor obtained from endometrial tissue samples to determine whether these cells repair muscular degeneration in a murine mdx model of DMD. Implanted cells conferred human dystrophin in degenerated muscle of immunodeficient mdx mice. We then examined menstrual blood–derived cells to determine whether primarily cultured nontransformed cells also repair dystrophied muscle. In vivo transfer of menstrual blood–derived cells into dystrophic muscles of immunodeficient mdx mice restored sarcolemmal expression of dystrophin. Labeling of implanted cells with enhanced green fluorescent protein and differential staining of human and murine nuclei suggest that human dystrophin expression is due to cell fusion between host myocytes and implanted cells. In vitro analysis revealed that endometrial progenitor cells and menstrual blood–derived cells can efficiently transdifferentiate into myoblasts/myocytes, fuse to C2C12 murine myoblasts by in vitro coculturing, and start to express dystrophin after fusion. These results demonstrate that the endometrial progenitor cells and menstrual blood–derived cells can transfer dystrophin into dystrophied myocytes through cell fusion and transdifferentiation in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

12.
Embryonic stem (ES) cells have great therapeutic potential because of their capacity to proliferate extensively and to form any fully differentiated cell of the body, including skeletal muscle cells. Successful generation of skeletal muscle in vivo, however, requires selective induction of the skeletal muscle lineage in cultures of ES cells and following transplantation, integration of appropriately differentiated skeletal muscle cells with recipient muscle. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a severe progressive muscle wasting disease due to a mutation in the dystrophin gene and the mdx mouse, an animal model for DMD, are characterized by the absence of the muscle membrane associated protein, dystrophin. Here, we show that co-culturing mouse ES cells with a preparation from mouse muscle enriched for myogenic stem and precursor cells, followed by injection into mdx mice, results occasionally in the formation of normal, vascularized skeletal muscle derived from the transplanted ES cells. Study of this phenomenon should provide valuable insights into skeletal muscle development in vivo from transplanted ES cells.  相似文献   

13.
Dystrophin is a cytoskeletal protein normally expressed underneath the sarcolemma of muscle fibers. The lack of dystrophin in Duchenne muscular Dystrophy (DMD) muscles results in fiber necrosis, which was proposed to be mediated by chronic calcium mishandling. The extensive comparison of dystrophic cells from human or mdx mice with normal muscles have suggested that the lack of dystrophin may alter the resting calcium permeability and steady-state levels of calcium, but this latter observation remains controversial. It is also not clear, whether calcium mishandling is resulting from the dystrophic process or if dystrophin can directly regulate calcium handling in muscle cells. This prompted us to determine if transfection of full-length dystrophin or Becker Muscular Dystrophy (BMD) minidystrophin, a candidate for viral-mediated gene therapy, could change calcium handling properties. We took advantage of specific properties of Sol8 cell line showing the absence of dystrophin expression together with a drastic calcium mishandling. Here, we show that full-length dystrophin allowed the recovery of a low resting intracellular-free calcium concentration together with lower calcium transients. We also show for the first time that stable expression of minidystrophin was able to restore normal calcium handling in Sol8 myotubes through a better control of steady-state levels, calcium transients, and subcellular calcium events. It suggests that dystrophin could play a regulatory role on calcium homeostasis apparatus and that functional links exist between calcium signaling and cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

14.
《FEBS letters》1993,320(3):276-280
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients and mdx mice are characterized by the absence of dystrophin, a membrane cytoskeletal protein. Dystrophin is associated with a large oligomeric complex of sarcolemmal glycoproteins, including dystroglycan which provides a linkage to the extarcellular matrix component, laminin. The finding that all of the dystrophin-associated proteins (DAPs) are drastically reduced in DMD and mdx skeletal muscle supports the primary function of dystrophin as an anchor of the sarcolemmal glycoprotein complex to the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton. These findings indicate that the efficacy of dystrophin gene therapy will depend not only on replacing dystrophin but also on restoring all of the DAPs in the sarcolemma. Here we have investigated the status of the DAPs in the skeletal muscle of mdx mice transgenic for the dystrophin gene. Our results demonstrate that transfer of dystrophin gene restores all of the DAPs together with dystrophin, suggesting that dystrophin gene therapy should be effective in restoring the entire dystrophin-glycoprotein complex.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Li D  Yue Y  Duan D 《PloS one》2010,5(12):e15286
Inactivation of all utrophin isoforms in dystrophin-deficient mdx mice results in a strain of utrophin knockout mdx (uko/mdx) mice. Uko/mdx mice display severe clinical symptoms and die prematurely as in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients. Here we tested the hypothesis that marginal level dystrophin expression may improve the clinical outcome of uko/mdx mice. It is well established that mdx3cv (3cv) mice express a near-full length dystrophin protein at ~5% of the normal level. We crossed utrophin-null mutation to the 3cv background. The resulting uko/3cv mice expressed the same level of dystrophin as 3cv mice but utrophin expression was completely eliminated. Surprisingly, uko/3cv mice showed a much milder phenotype. Compared to uko/mdx mice, uko/3cv mice had significantly higher body weight and stronger specific muscle force. Most importantly, uko/3cv outlived uko/mdx mice by several folds. Our results suggest that a threshold level dystrophin expression may provide vital clinical support in a severely affected DMD mouse model. This finding may hold clinical implications in developing novel DMD therapies.  相似文献   

17.
Muscle fibers attach to laminin in the basal lamina using two distinct mechanisms: the dystrophin glycoprotein complex and the alpha 7 beta 1 integrin. Defects in these linkage systems result in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), alpha 2 laminin congenital muscular dystrophy, sarcoglycan-related muscular dystrophy, and alpha 7 integrin congenital muscular dystrophy. Therefore, the molecular continuity between the extracellular matrix and cell cytoskeleton is essential for the structural and functional integrity of skeletal muscle. To test whether the alpha 7 beta 1 integrin can compensate for the absence of dystrophin, we expressed the rat alpha 7 chain in mdx/utr(-/-) mice that lack both dystrophin and utrophin. These mice develop a severe muscular dystrophy highly akin to that in DMD, and they also die prematurely. Using the muscle creatine kinase promoter, expression of the alpha 7BX2 integrin chain was increased 2.0-2.3-fold in mdx/utr(-/-) mice. Concomitant with the increase in the alpha 7 chain, its heterodimeric partner, beta 1D, was also increased in the transgenic animals. Transgenic expression of the alpha 7BX2 chain in the mdx/utr(-/-) mice extended their longevity by threefold, reduced kyphosis and the development of muscle disease, and maintained mobility and the structure of the neuromuscular junction. Thus, bolstering alpha 7 beta 1 integrin-mediated association of muscle cells with the extracellular matrix alleviates many of the symptoms of disease observed in mdx/utr(-/-) mice and compensates for the absence of the dystrophin- and utrophin-mediated linkage systems. This suggests that enhanced expression of the alpha 7 beta 1 integrin may provide a novel approach to treat DMD and other muscle diseases that arise due to defects in the dystrophin glycoprotein complex. A video that contrasts kyphosis, gait, joint contractures, and mobility in mdx/utr(-/-) and alpha 7BX2-mdx/utr(-/-) mice can be accessed at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/152/6/1207.  相似文献   

18.
We have studied by indirect immunofluorescence, using three different polyclonal antidystrophin antibodies raised against fusion proteins, the neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) in muscle biopsies from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients, from human controls and mutant "mdx" mice and normal mice. In controls the periphery of all muscle fibres was strongly labelled by the three dystrophin antibodies and there was a high concentration of labelling at the NMJs (where it was co-localized with acetylcholine receptor labelled by the alpha-bungarotoxin). In DMD and in "mdx" mice the NMJs were equally labelled whereas there was an absence of reaction at the periphery of all (DMD) or most ("mdx" mice) muscle fibers. These findings suggest that a dystrophin-like protein, which was identified by the antibodies we have used, is present at the NMJs in the Duchenne's myopathy and "mdx" mice.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is secondary to loss-of-function mutations in the dystrophin gene. The causes underlying the progression of DMD, differential muscle involvement, and the discrepancies in phenotypes among species with the same genetic defect are not understood. The mdx mouse, an animal model with dystrophin mutation, has a milder phenotype. This article reviews the available information on expression of signaling-related molecules in DMD and mdx. Extracellular matrix proteoglycans, growth factors, integrins, caveolin-3, and neuronal nitric oxide synthase expression do not show significant differences. Calcineurin is inconsistently activated in mdx. which is associated with lack of cardiomyopathy, compared to the permanent calcineurin activation in mdx/utrophin null mice that have a DMD-like cardiomyopathy. Levels of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and extracellular regulated kinases (ERKs) differ among mdx and DMD. Further work is needed to identify the point of discrepancy in these signaling molecules' pathways in dystrophynopathies.  相似文献   

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