scholarly journals Interrogation of Dystrophin and Dystroglycan Complex Protein Turnover After Exon Skipping Therapy

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
James S. Novak ◽  
Rita Spathis ◽  
Utkarsh J. Dang ◽  
Alyson A. Fiorillo ◽  
Ravi Hindupur ◽  
...  

Recently, the Food and Drug Administration granted accelerated approvals for four exon skipping therapies –Eteplirsen, Golodirsen, Viltolarsen, and Casimersen –for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). However, these treatments have only demonstrated variable and largely sub-therapeutic levels of restored dystrophin protein in DMD patients, limiting their clinical impact. To better understand variable protein expression and the behavior of truncated dystrophin protein in vivo, we assessed turnover dynamics of restored dystrophin and dystroglycan complex (DGC) proteins in mdx mice after exon skipping therapy, compared to those dynamics in wild type mice, using a targeted, highly-reproducible and sensitive, in vivo stable isotope labeling mass spectrometry approach in multiple muscle tissues. Through statistical modeling, we found that restored dystrophin protein exhibited altered stability and slower turnover in treated mdx muscle compared with that in wild type muscle (∼44 d vs. ∼24 d, respectively). Assessment of mRNA transcript stability (quantitative real-time PCR, droplet digital PCR) and dystrophin protein expression (capillary gel electrophoresis, immunofluorescence) support our dystrophin protein turnover measurements and modeling. Further, we assessed pathology-induced muscle fiber turnover through bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling to model dystrophin and DGC protein turnover in the context persistent fiber degeneration. Our findings reveal sequestration of restored dystrophin protein after exon skipping therapy in mdx muscle leading to a significant extension of its half-life compared to the dynamics of full-length dystrophin in normal muscle. In contrast, DGC proteins show constant turnover attributable to myofiber degeneration and dysregulation of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in dystrophic muscle. Based on our results, we demonstrate the use of targeted mass spectrometry to evaluate the suitability and functionality of restored dystrophin isoforms in the context of disease and propose its use to optimize alternative gene correction strategies in development for DMD.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Duchesne ◽  
Jing Dong ◽  
Andrew N. Bayne ◽  
Nguyen-Vi Mohamed ◽  
Wei Yi ◽  
...  

AbstractPatient-derived organoids from induced pluripotent stem cells have emerged as a model for studying human diseases beyond conventional two-dimensional (2D) cell culture. Briefly, these three-dimensional organoids are highly complex, capable of self-organizing, recapitulate cellular architecture, and have the potential to model diseases in complex organs, such as the brain. For example, the hallmark of Parkinson’s disease - proteostatic dysfunction leading to the selective death of neurons in the substantia nigra - present a subtle distinction in cell type specificity that is simply lost in 2D cell culture models. As such, the development of robust methods to study global proteostasis and protein turnover in organoids will remain a critical need as organoid models evolve. To solve this problem, we have designed a workflow to extract proteins from organoids and measure global protein turnover using mass spectrometry and stable isotope labeling using amino acids in cell culture (SILAC). This allowed us to measure the turnover rates of 844 proteins and compare protein turnover to previously reported data in primary cell cultures and in vivo models. Taken together, this method will facilitate the study of proteostasis in organoid models of human disease and will provide an analytical and statistical framework to measure protein turnover in organoids of all cell types.


1990 ◽  
Vol 268 (3) ◽  
pp. 795-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
P A MacLennan ◽  
R H T Edwards

mdx mice lack the protein dystrophin, the absence of which causes Duchenne muscular dystrophy in humans. To examine how mdx mice maintain muscle mass despite dystrophin deficiency, we measured protein turnover rates in muscles of mdx and wild-type (C57BL/10) mice in vivo. At all ages studied, rates of muscle protein synthesis and degradation were higher in mdx than in C57BL/10 mice.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (444) ◽  
pp. eaat0195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xianjun Gao ◽  
Ning Ran ◽  
Xue Dong ◽  
Bingfeng Zuo ◽  
Rong Yang ◽  
...  

Exosomes are circulating nanovesicular carriers of macromolecules, increasingly used for diagnostics and therapeutics. The ability to load and target patient-derived exosomes without altering exosomal surfaces is key to unlocking their therapeutic potential. We demonstrate that a peptide (CP05) identified by phage display enables targeting, cargo loading, and capture of exosomes from diverse origins, including patient-derived exosomes, through binding to CD63—an exosomal surface protein. Systemic administration of exosomes loaded with CP05-modified, dystrophin splice–correcting phosphorodiamidate morpholino oligomer (EXOPMO) increased dystrophin protein 18-fold in quadriceps of dystrophin-deficient mdx mice compared to CP05-PMO. Loading CP05-muscle–targeting peptide on EXOPMO further increased dystrophin expression in muscle with functional improvement without any detectable toxicity. Our study demonstrates that an exosomal anchor peptide enables direct, effective functionalization and capture of exosomes, thus providing a tool for exosome engineering, probing gene function in vivo, and targeted therapeutic drug delivery.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 855-855
Author(s):  
Anna M Eiring ◽  
Jason Harb ◽  
Paolo Neviani ◽  
Joshua Oaks ◽  
Shujun Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 855 MicroRNAs (miRs) and heterogeneous ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) are post-transcriptional gene regulators that bind mRNA in a sequence-specific manner. We have reported that a) hnRNP-E2 suppresses CEBPA mRNA translation and inhibits myeloid maturation of bone marrow (BM) progenitors from chronic myelogenous leukemia patients in myeloid blast crisis (CML-BCCD34+; Perrotti et al, Nat Genet 2002); and b) miR-328 expression is lost in myeloid CML-BCCD34+ progenitors (n=6) and its restored expression at physiological levels rescues granulocytic differentiation and impairs clonogenic potential of primary BCR/ABL+ blasts (Eiring et al, ASH 2007). Here we show by Northern blot, real-time PCR, and microarray analyses that miR-328 levels increase during granulocytic differentiation of normal human CD34+ and mouse Lin− BM progenitors, but not during differentiation towards erythroid, megakaryocytic or monocytic lineages. BCR/ABL uses the same MAPKERK1/2-hnRNP-E2 signaling pathway to suppress both C/EBPα and miR-328, as pharmacologic or shRNA-mediated inhibition of these molecules restored miR-328 expression in BCR/ABL+ cells. In fact, two functional C/EBPα binding sites are present in the miR-328 promoter region and C/EBPα interacts in vivo with these regulatory elements to enhance miR-328 transcription. Importantly, we also show that restored maturation of BCR/ABL+ blasts requires direct interaction of hnRNP-E2 with the C-rich regions of miR-328. Indeed, RNA-immunoprecipitation (RIP) assays demonstrated that miR-328 directly binds to hnRNP-E2 independent of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). Furthermore, ectopic miR-328, but not miR-181b, resulted in decreased in vivo binding of hnRNP-E2 to the uORF/spacer region of CEBPA mRNA, thereby releasing CEBPA from hnRNP-E2 translation inhibition and rescuing C/EBPa-driven neutrophil maturation (decoy activity). Differentiation of miR-328-expressing CML-BCCD34+ blasts (88.8±2.4% post-mitotic cells) correlated with induction of C/EBPa protein expression, whereas CEBPA mRNA and hnRNP E2 protein levels remained unchanged. The existence of a direct miR-328/hnRNP-E2/CEBPA interplay was formally demonstrated in vitro using RRL-directed translation assays and in vivo using the 6.15 clone of 32D-BCR/ABL cells that do not express endogenous CEBPA mRNA and require ectopic C/EBPα (wt-uORF-CEBPA) for differentiation. Addition of miR-328, but not miR-330, to hnRNP-E2-containing RRL reactions increased newly synthesized 35S-C/EBPa levels by >100%. Likewise, forced miR-328 expression in vivo resulted in decreased hnRNP-E2 binding to CEBPA mRNA, induction of C/EBPa protein but not mRNA and rescued granulocytic differentiation of 6.15-wt-uORF-CEBPA but not vector-transduced 6.15 cells. While hnRNP-E2 was not found in complex with basic RISC components (Dicer, TRBP2 and Ago2), RIP assays detected miR-328 associated to Dicer and Ago2 in miR-328-expressing cells, suggesting that it also acts through canonical RISC-dependent base-pairing with mRNA targets. Indeed, we identified the BCR/ABL-regulated PIM1 serine-threonine kinase as a bona fide miR-328 target in BCR/ABL+ cells. Ectopic miR-328 suppressed PIM1 protein but not mRNA levels, and this effect required integrity of the miR-328 binding site present in the PIM1 3'UTR. Forced expression of a wild-type but not kinase-deficient PIM1 lacking the 3'UTR into miR-328-expressing cells fully rescued BCR/ABL clonogenicity, suggesting that miR-328-induced PIM1 suppression accounts for reduced survival of miR-328-infected BCR/ABL+ blasts. To show that miR-328 acts on PIM1 in a RISC-dependent manner, we mutated the miR-328 seed sequence (miR-328-Mut) while retaining its C-rich character. Similar to wild-type miR-328, miR-328-Mut efficiently interacted with hnRNP-E2, restored C/EBPa protein expression and rescued granulocytic differentiation, but was unable to silence PIM1 in 32D-BCR/ABL cells, indicating that the C-rich character of miR-328 is essential for its decoy activity, while its seed sequence integrity is necessary for RISC-dependent pairing to mRNA targets. Thus, the discovery of dual activities for miR-328 not only adds a new layer of complexity to the mechanisms regulating CML disease progression, but also highlights the ability of miRNAs to alter mRNA metabolism by acting as molecular decoys for RNA-binding proteins. Disclosures: Cortes: Novartis: Research Funding.


2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 480-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Feng ◽  
Christopher L. Sansam ◽  
Minati Singh ◽  
Ronald B. Emeson

ABSTRACT ADAR2 is a double-stranded-RNA-specific adenosine deaminase involved in the editing of mammalian RNAs by the site-selective conversion of adenosine to inosine. Previous studies from our laboratory have demonstrated that ADAR2 can modify its own pre-mRNA to create a proximal 3′ splice site containing a noncanonical adenosine-inosine dinucleotide. Alternative splicing to this proximal acceptor adds 47 nucleotides to the mature ADAR2 transcript, thereby resulting in the loss of functional ADAR2 protein expression due to premature translation termination in an alternate reading frame. To examine whether the editing of ADAR2 transcripts represents a negative autoregulatory strategy to modulate ADAR2 protein expression, we have generated genetically modified mice in which the ability of ADAR2 to edit its own pre-mRNA has been selectively ablated by deletion of a critical sequence (editing site complementary sequence [ECS]) required for adenosine-to-inosine conversion. Here we demonstrate that ADAR2 autoediting and subsequent alternative splicing are abolished in homozygous ΔECS mice and that ADAR2 protein expression is increased in numerous tissues compared to wild-type animals. The observed increases in ADAR2 protein expression correlate with the extent of ADAR2 autoediting observed with wild-type tissues and correspond to increases in the editing of ADAR2 substrates, indicating that ADAR2 autoediting is a key regulator of ADAR2 protein expression and activity in vivo.


2004 ◽  
Vol 287 (4) ◽  
pp. R961-R968 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Matecki ◽  
Ghiabe H. Guibinga ◽  
Basil J. Petrof

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is characterized by myofiber necrosis, muscle replacement by connective tissue, and crippling weakness. Although the mdx mouse also lacks dystrophin, most muscles show little myofiber loss or functional impairment. An exception is the mdx diaphragm, which is phenotypically similar to the human disease. Here we tested the hypothesis that the mdx diaphragm has a defective regenerative response to necrotic injury, which could account for its severe phenotype. Massive necrosis was induced in mdx and wild-type (C57BL10) mouse diaphragms in vivo by topical application of notexin, which destroys mature myofibers while leaving myogenic precursor satellite cells intact. At 4 h after acute exposure to notexin, >90% of diaphragm myofibers in both wild-type and mdx mice demonstrated pathological sarcolemmal leakiness, and there was a complete loss of isometric force-generating capacity. Both groups of mice showed strong expression of embryonic myosin within the diaphragm at 5 days, which was largely extinguished by 20 days after injury. At 60 days postinjury, wild-type diaphragms exhibited a persistent loss (∼25%) of isometric force-generating capacity, associated with a trend toward increased connective tissue infiltration. In contrast, mdx diaphragms achieved complete functional recovery of force generation to noninjured values, and there was no increase in muscle connective tissue over baseline. These data argue against any loss of intrinsic regenerative capacity within the mdx diaphragm, despite characteristic features of major dystrophic pathology being present. Our findings support the concept that significant latent regenerative capacity resides within dystrophic muscles, which could potentially be exploited for therapeutic purposes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 944-954
Author(s):  
Tatyana A Meyers ◽  
Jackie A Heitzman ◽  
DeWayne Townsend

Abstract Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a devastating neuromuscular disease that causes progressive muscle wasting and cardiomyopathy. This X-linked disease results from mutations of the DMD allele on the X-chromosome resulting in the loss of expression of the protein dystrophin. Dystrophin loss causes cellular dysfunction that drives the loss of healthy skeletal muscle and cardiomyocytes. As gene therapy strategies strive toward dystrophin restoration through micro-dystrophin delivery or exon skipping, preclinical models have shown that incomplete restoration in the heart results in heterogeneous dystrophin expression throughout the myocardium. This outcome prompts the question of how much dystrophin restoration is sufficient to rescue the heart from DMD-related pathology. Female DMD carrier hearts can shed light on this question, due to their mosaic cardiac dystrophin expression resulting from random X-inactivation. In this work, a dystrophinopathy carrier mouse model was derived by breeding male or female dystrophin-null mdx mice with a wild type mate. We report that these carrier hearts are significantly susceptible to injury induced by one or multiple high doses of isoproterenol, despite expressing ~57% dystrophin. Importantly, only carrier mice with dystrophic mothers showed mortality after isoproterenol. These findings indicate that dystrophin restoration in approximately half of the heart still allows for marked vulnerability to injury. Additionally, the discovery of divergent stress-induced mortality based on parental origin in mice with equivalent dystrophin expression underscores the need for better understanding of the epigenetic, developmental, and even environmental factors that may modulate vulnerability in the dystrophic heart.


2006 ◽  
Vol 14 (7S_Part_20) ◽  
pp. P1091-P1092
Author(s):  
Norelle C. Wildburger ◽  
Greg S. Day ◽  
Wendy Sigurdson ◽  
Melissa Sullivan ◽  
Amanda Peters ◽  
...  

The Analyst ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 142 (11) ◽  
pp. 1891-1899 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evelyn Rampler ◽  
Cristina Coman ◽  
Gerrit Hermann ◽  
Albert Sickmann ◽  
Robert Ahrends ◽  
...  

Quantification is an essential task in comprehensive lipidomics studies challenged by the high number of lipids, their chemical diversity and their dynamic range (up to 7 orders of magnitude) of the lipidome.


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