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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

There is a pressing need to develop new therapeutic approaches to Duchenne muscular dystrophy, an X-linked fatal disease primarily affecting skeletal and cardiac muscle. Gene therapy is an approach that has attracted much interest since the description of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene and its mutations in 1987. Since 1990 numerous reporter and dystrophin gene transfer studies have been conducted on muscles of animals but mostly in mice. Experimental protocols have ranged from germ-line gene transfer (via the production of transgenics) to somatic gene transfer studies using viral or non-viral vectors. But what have we actually learned from such studies that can be applied to patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy? Various dystrophin, utrophin and integrin recombinant cDNAs have been shown to prevent the development of muscular dystrophy in transgenic dystrophic (mdx) mice. Somatic gene transfer prior to the onset of pathology have been shown to prevent the development of the muscular dystrophy in the mdx mouse but the data is less convincing for the beneficial effects of somatic gene transfer following the establishment of pathology. The time of onset and the course of the disease differ substantially between mouse and man and raise concerns about the applicability of gene therapy in man where the disease manifests in utero and the progression is more severe. The other major concern relates to uncertainty over the efficiency of the different vectors in man, particularly as many patients are likely to have encountered the infectious forms of the viruses that are proposed as vectors.
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PMID:Gene transfer studies in animals: what do they really tell us about the prospects for gene therapy in DMD? 1220 90

Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is an inherited multisystem disorder characterized by the presence of a high polymorphic expansion of trinucleotide (CTG) repeat in the 3' untranslated region of the DM protein kinase (DMPK) gene. However, the role of myotonic dystrophy protein kinase (DMPK) has yet to be elucidated. Studies aimed to discover possible physiological targets of DMPK indicated several subcellular localization sites, such as neuromuscular junctions, myotendinous junctions, and terminal cisternae of the sarcoplasmic reticulum in the skeletal muscle and intercalated discs in the cardiac muscle. Here, we extend our previous observations on the localization of DMPK at gap junction (GJ) level in the heart, taking advantage of the polyclonal peptide-specific anti-DMPK antibodies raised against two different domains of the protein. DMPK was detected by immunofluorescence at the intercalated disc level by both antibodies. Double immunofluorescence staining experiments performed with each anti-DMPK and anti-connexin43 showed colocalization of the two antigens. Immunoblot analysis of partially purified GJs showed co-sedimentation of DMPK and connexin43. We conclude that GJs are a genuine localization site of DMPK. Given the known regulation exerted by protein kinases on assembly, trafficking, gating, and disassembly of connexins, such a localization may be relevant to the functional role of connexins. DM is the most common muscular dystrophy in adults, and is known by the cardiac involvement that is a common feature in DM patients. Localization of DMPK at GJ in relation to DM is also briefly discussed.
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PMID:Myotonic dystrophy protein kinase of the cardiac muscle: evaluation using an immunochemical approach. 1222 10

We have recently shown that a deletion in the Large gene, encoding a putative glycosyltransferase, is the molecular defect underlying the myodystrophy (previously myd; now Large(myd)) mouse. Here we show that the muscular dystrophy phenotype is not confined to skeletal muscle, but is also present in the heart and tongue. Immunohistochemistry indicates disruption of the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein complex (DGC) in skeletal and cardiac muscle. Quantitative western blotting shows a general increase in the expression of DGC proteins and of dysferlin and caveolin-3 in mutant skeletal muscle. In contrast, the expression of DGC proteins is reduced in cardiac muscle. Overlay assays show loss of laminin binding by alpha-dystroglycan in Large(myd) skeletal and cardiac muscle and in brain. We also show that the phenotype of Large(myd) mice is not restricted to muscular dystrophy, but also includes ophthalmic and central nervous system (CNS) defects. Electroretinograms of homozygous mutant mice show gross abnormalities of b-wave characteristics, indicative of a complex defect in retinal transmission. The laminar architecture of the cortices of the cerebrum and the cerebellum is disturbed, indicating defective neuronal migration. Thus, the phenotype of the Large(myd) mouse shows similarities to the heterogeneous group of human muscle eye brain diseases characterized by severe congenital muscular dystrophy, eye abnormalities and CNS neuronal migration defects. These diseases include Fukuyama-type muscular dystrophy and muscle-eye-brain disease, both of which are also due to mutations in predicted glycosylation enzymes. Therefore, the Large(myd) mouse represents an important animal model for studying the function of glycosylation in muscle, brain and retina.
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PMID:Skeletal, cardiac and tongue muscle pathology, defective retinal transmission, and neuronal migration defects in the Large(myd) mouse defines a natural model for glycosylation-deficient muscle - eye - brain disorders. 1235 92

DMPK is a serine/threonine kinase implicated in the human disease myotonic muscular dystrophy (DM). Skeletal muscle Na channels exhibit late reopenings in Dmpk-deficient mice and peak current density is reduced, implicating DMPK in regulation of membrane excitability. Since complete heart block and sudden cardiac death occur in the disease, we tested the hypothesis that cardiac Na channels also exhibit abnormal gating in Dmpk-deficient mice. We made whole cell and cell-attached patch clamp recordings of ventricular cardiomyocytes enzymatically isolated from wild-type, Dmpk+/-, and Dmpk-/- mice. Recordings from membrane patches containing one or a few Na channels revealed multiple Na channel reopenings occurring after the macroscopic Na current had subsided in both Dmpk+/- and Dmpk-/- muscle, but only rare reopenings in wild-type muscle (>3-fold difference, P < 0.05). This resulted in a plateau of non-inactivating Na current in Dmpk-deficient muscle. The magnitude of this plateau current was independent on the magnitude of the test potential from -40 to 0 mV and was also independent of gene dose. Macroscopic Na current density was similar in wild-type and Dmpk-deficient muscle, as was steady-state Na channel gating. Decay of macroscopic currents was slowed in Dmpk-/- muscle, but not in Dmpk+/- or wild-type muscle. Entry into, and recovery from, inactivation were similar at multiple test potentials in wild-type and Dmpk-deficient muscle. Resting membrane potential was depolarized, and action potential duration was significantly prolonged in Dmpk-deficient muscle. Thus in cardiac muscle, Dmpk deficiency results in multiple late reopenings of Na channels similar to those seen in Dmpk-deficient skeletal muscle. This is reflected in a plateau of non-inactivating macroscopic Na current and prolongation of cardiac action potentials.
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PMID:Abnormal Na channel gating in murine cardiac myocytes deficient in myotonic dystrophy protein kinase. 1245 5

Alterations in mitochondrial distribution and morphology are associated with normal cellular processes such as cell division and differentiation, as well as a variety of pathological conditions, including muscular dystrophy and cardiomyopathy. These observations have illuminated the necessity for a cellular machinery that mediates mitochondrial behavior and function. One important candidate member of this machinery is the cytoskeleton, all three members of which seem to associate with mitochondria. The role and significance of such association with the intermediate filament (IF) cytoskeleton in muscle was until recently completely unknown. Recent studies with desmin-deficient mice revealed the importance of desmin IFs in mitochondrial behavior and function. This review summarizes recent findings that link desmin cytoskeleton to muscle mitochondrial distribution and function. In particular, hypotheses are presented on the potential mechanism by which desmin's absence from cardiac muscle leads to abnormal mitochondrial behavior and compromised function, potentially responsible for the development of dilated cardiomyopathy and heart failure in desmin-null mice.
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PMID:Desmin cytoskeleton: a potential regulator of muscle mitochondrial behavior and function. 1253 20

While calf muscle hypertrophy is a striking diagnostic finding in sarcoglycanopathy, as it is in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies, its pathogenetic mechanism remains unknown. gamma-Sarcoglycan, one of the subunits of the sarcoglycan complex, is the protein responsible for gamma-sarcoglycanopathy. To elucidate the pathogenetic mechanisms of muscle hypertrophy and degeneration in muscular dystrophy, we utilized a mutant mouse as a model animal. In this study, we generated gamma-sarcoglycan-deficient (gsg-/-) mice by gene targeting. The gsg-/- mice described here, similar to the gsg-/- mice reported previously (J Cell Biol 142 (1998) 1279), demonstrated skeletal and cardiac muscle degeneration. The limb, shoulder, and pelvic muscles of the gsg-/- mice exhibited progressive muscle hypertrophy and weakness with age, and the findings were similar to those seen in other mouse models for limb-girdle and Duchenne muscular dystrophy. We found that the number of muscle fibers increased with age, and most of the fibers in the hypertrophic muscle were centrally nucleated regenerating fibers. Therefore, muscle hypertrophy of the gsg-/- mice may result from an increase of the number of muscle fibers and probable fiber branching and may not be due to the pseudohypertrophy caused by fibrous and fat tissue replacement, as has been long supposed in muscular dystrophy. The muscle pathology became more 'dystrophic' in mice over 1 year of age when there was a marked variation in fiber size with interstitial fibrosis.
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PMID:Pathological analysis of muscle hypertrophy and degeneration in muscular dystrophy in gamma-sarcoglycan-deficient mice. 1260 1

Disruption of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex caused by genetic defects of dystrophin or sarcoglycans results in muscular dystrophy and/or cardiomyopathy in humans and animal models. However, the key early molecular events leading to myocyte degeneration remain elusive. Here, we observed that the growth factor-regulated channel (GRC), which belongs to the transient receptor potential channel family, is elevated in the sarcolemma of skeletal and/or cardiac muscle in dystrophic human patients and animal models deficient in dystrophin or delta-sarcoglycan. However, total cell GRC does not differ markedly between normal and dystrophic muscles. Analysis of the properties of myotubes prepared from delta-sarcoglycan-deficient BIO14.6 hamsters revealed that GRC is activated in response to myocyte stretch and is responsible for enhanced Ca2+ influx and resultant cell damage as measured by creatine phosphokinase efflux. We found that cell stretch increases GRC translocation to the sarcolemma, which requires entry of external Ca2+. Consistent with these findings, cardiac-specific expression of GRC in a transgenic mouse model produced cardiomyopathy due to Ca2+ overloading, with disease expression roughly parallel to sarcolemmal GRC levels. The results suggest that GRC is a key player in the pathogenesis of myocyte degeneration caused by dystrophin-glycoprotein complex disruption.
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PMID:A novel mechanism of myocyte degeneration involving the Ca2+-permeable growth factor-regulated channel. 1279 81

Muscular dystrophy with myositis (mdm) is a recessive mouse mutation that is caused by a small deletion in the giant elastic muscle protein titin. Homozygous mdm/mdm mice develop a progressive muscular dystrophy, leading to death at approximately 2 months of age. We surveyed the transcriptomes of skeletal muscles from 24 day old homozygous mdm/mdm and +/+ wild-type mice, an age when MDM animals have normal passive and active tensions and sarcomeric structure. Of the 12488 genes surveyed (U74 affymetrix array), 75 genes were twofold to 30-fold differentially expressed, including CARP (cardiac ankyrin repeat protein), ankrd2/Arpp (a CARP-like protein) and MLP (muscle LIM protein), all of which associate with the titin filament system. The four genes most strongly affected (eightfold to 30-fold change) were all members of the CARP-regulated Nkx-2.5-dependent signal pathway, and CARP mRNA level was 30-fold elevated in MDM skeletal muscle tissues. The CARP protein overexpressed in MDM became associated with the I-band region of the sarcomere. The mdm mutation excises the C-terminal portion of titin's N2A region, abolishing its interaction with p94/calpain-3 protease. Thus, the composition of the titin N2A protein complex is altered in MDM by incorporation of CARP and loss of p94/calpain-3. These changes were absent from the following control tissues (1). cardiac muscles from homozygous mdm/mdm animals, (2). skeletal and cardiac muscle from heterozygous mdm/+ animals, and (3). dystrophic muscles from MDX mice. Thus, the altered composition of the titin N2A complex is specific for the titin-based skeletal muscular dystrophy in MDM.
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PMID:Induction and myofibrillar targeting of CARP, and suppression of the Nkx2.5 pathway in the MDM mouse with impaired titin-based signaling. 1474 Dec 10

Disruption of the sarcoglycan complex leads to muscle membrane instability and muscular dystrophy in humans and mice. Through the dystrophin glycoprotein complex, sarcoglycan participates in connecting the internal cytoskeleton to the membrane and the extracellular matrix. Integrin alpha7beta1 is also a transmembrane protein of skeletal and cardiac muscle that similarly links the cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix. Mice lacking integrin alpha7 develop mild muscle degeneration, while sarcoglycan mutant mice display overt muscle degeneration and muscular dystrophy. In sarcoglycan-deficient muscle, integrin alpha7 protein was upregulated at the plasma membrane. To ascertain whether integrin alpha7 upregulation compensates for the loss of the transmembrane sarcoglycan linkage in sarcoglycan-deficient muscle, we generated mice lacking both integrin alpha7 and gamma-sarcoglycan (gxi). These double-mutant gxi mice exhibit profound, rapid muscle degeneration leading to death before one month of age consistent with a weakened cellular attachment to the extracellular matrix. The regenerative capacity of gxi muscle was intact with increased embryonic myosin heavy chain expression, myofiber central nucleation and normal in vivo myoblast differentiation. Therefore, upregulation of integrin alpha7beta1 compensates as a transmembrane muscle cell attachment for sarcoglycan consistent with overlapping roles for sarcoglycan and integrins in mediating cytoskeletal-membrane-extracellular matrix interaction.
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PMID:Genetic compensation for sarcoglycan loss by integrin alpha7beta1 in muscle. 1525 20

This study evaluated common clinical characteristics of patients with lamin A/C gene mutations that cause either isolated dilated cardiomyopathy or dilated cardiomyopathy in association with skeletal muscular dystrophy. We pooled clinical data of all published carriers of lamin A/C gene mutations as cause of skeletal and/or cardiac muscle disease and reviewed ECG findings. Cardiac dysrhythmias were reported in 92% of patients after the age of 30 years; heart failure was reported in 64% after the age of 50. Sudden death was the most frequently reported mode of death (46%) in both the cardiac and the neuromuscular phenotype. Carriers of lamin A/C gene mutations often received a pacemaker (28%). However, this intervention did not alter the rate of sudden death. Review of the ECG findings typically showed a low amplitude P wave and prolongation of the PR interval with a narrow QRS complex. This meta-analysis suggests that cardiomyopathy due to lamin A/C gene mutations portends a high risk of sudden death, and that this risk does not differ between subjects with predominantly cardiac or neuromuscular disease. This implies then that all carriers of a lamin A/C gene mutation need to be carefully screened with particular emphasis also on tachyarrhythmias. Prospective studies are needed to evaluate risk stratification and proper treatment strategies.
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PMID:Meta-analysis of clinical characteristics of 299 carriers of LMNA gene mutations: do lamin A/C mutations portend a high risk of sudden death? 1555 Oct 23


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