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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Plectin is a versatile cytoskeletal linker protein that preferentially localizes at interfaces between intermediate filaments and the plasma membrane in muscle, epithelial cells, and other tissues. Its deficiency causes
muscular dystrophy
with epidermolysis bullosa simplex. To better understand the functional roles of plectin beneath the sarcolemma of skeletal muscles and to gain some insights into the underlying mechanism of plectin-deficient
muscular dystrophy
, we studied in vivo structural and molecular relationships of plectin to subsarcolemmal cytoskeletal components, such as desmin, dystrophin, and vinculin, in rat skeletal muscles. Immunogold electron microscopy revealed that plectin fine threads tethered desmin intermediate filaments onto subsarcolemmal dense plaques overlying Z-lines and I-bands. These dense plaques were found to contain dystrophin and vinculin, and thus may be the structural basis of costameres. The in vivo association of plectin with desmin, (meta-)vinculin, dystrophin, and actin was demonstrated by immunoprecipitation experiments. Treatment of plectin immunoprecipitates with
gelsolin
reduced actin, dystrophin, and (meta-)vinculin but not desmin, implicating that subsarcolemmal actin could partly mediate the interaction between plectin and dystrophin or (meta-)vinculin. Altogether, our data suggest that plectin, along with desmin intermediate filaments, might serve a vital structural role in the stabilization of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton.
...
PMID:Plectin tethers desmin intermediate filaments onto subsarcolemmal dense plaques containing dystrophin and vinculin. 1261 Jul 30
Limb girdle
muscular dystrophy
type 2A (LGMD2A) is caused by mutations in CAPN3, which encodes an intracellular cysteine protease. To elucidate the fundamental molecular changes that may be responsible for the pathological features of LGMD2A, we employed cDNA microarray analysis. We divided LGMD2A muscles into two groups according to specific pathological features: an early-stage group characterized by the presence of active necrosis and a regeneration process and a later-stage group characterized by the presence of lobulated fibers. After comparing the gene expression profiles of the two groups of LGMD2A muscles with control muscles, we identified 29 genes whose mRNA expression profiles were specifically altered in muscles with lobulated fibers. Interestingly, this group included genes that encode actin filament binding and regulatory proteins, such as
gelsolin
, PDZ and LIM domain 3 (PDLIM3) and troponin I1. Western blot analysis confirmed the upregulation of these proteins. From these results, we propose that abnormal increased expression of actin filament binding proteins may contribute to the changes of the intra-myofiber structures, observed in lobulated fibers in LGMD2A.
...
PMID:Characterization of lobulated fibers in limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2A by gene expression profiling. 1725 32
Duchenne muscular dystrophy is the most frequent neuromuscular disorder of childhood. Although this x-linked muscle disease is extremely progressive, not all subtypes of skeletal muscles are affected in the same way. While extremities and trunk muscles are drastically weakened, extraocular muscles are usually spared in Duchenne patients. In order to determine the global protein expression pattern in these naturally protected muscles we have performed a comparative proteomic study of the established mdx mouse model of x-linked
muscular dystrophy
. Fluorescence difference in-gel electrophoretic analysis of 9-week-old dystrophin-deficient versus age-matched normal extraocular muscle, using a pH 4-7 gel range, identified out of 1088 recognized protein spots a moderate expression change in only seven protein species. Desmin, apolipoprotein A-I binding protein and perilipin-3 were found to be increased and
gelsolin
, gephyrin, transaldolase, and acyl-CoA dehydrogenase were shown to be decreased in mdx extraocular muscles. Immunoblotting revealed a drastic up-regulation of utrophin, comparable levels of beta-dystroglycan and key Ca(2+)-regulatory elements, and an elevated concentration of small stress proteins in mdx extraocular muscles. This suggests that despite the lack of dystrophin only a limited number of cellular systems are perturbed in mdx extraocular muscles, probably due to the substitution of dystrophin by its autosomal homolog. Utrophin appears to prevent the loss of dystrophin-associated proteins and Ca(2+)-handling elements in extraocular muscle tissue. Interestingly, the adaptive mechanisms that cause the sparing of extraocular fibers seem to be closely linked to an enhanced cellular stress response.
...
PMID:Proteomic profiling of naturally protected extraocular muscles from the dystrophin-deficient mdx mouse. 2047 57