Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (weakness)
37,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mutations in the human TPM3 gene encoding gamma-tropomyosin (alpha-tropomyosin-slow) expressed in slow skeletal muscle fibers cause nemaline myopathy. Nemaline myopathy is a rare, clinically heterogeneous congenital skeletal muscle disease with associated muscle weakness, characterized by the presence of nemaline rods in muscle fibers. In one missense mutation the codon corresponding to Met-8, a highly conserved residue, is changed to Arg. Here, a rat fast alpha-tropomyosin cDNA with the Met8Arg mutation was expressed in Escherichia coli to investigate the effect of the mutation on in vitro function. The Met8Arg mutation reduces tropomyosin affinity for regulated actin 30- to 100-fold. Ca(2+)-sensitive regulatory function is retained, although activation of the actomyosin S1 ATPase in the presence of Ca(2+) is reduced. The poor activation may reflect weakened actin affinity or reduced effectiveness in switching the thin filament to the open, force-producing state. The presence of the Met8Arg mutation severely, but locally, destabilizes the tropomyosin coiled coil in a model peptide, and would be expected to impair end-to-end association between TMs on the thin filament. In muscle, the mutation may alter thin filament assembly consequent to lower actin affinity and altered binding of the N-terminus to tropomodulin at the pointed end of the filament. The mutation may also reduce force generation during activation.
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PMID:Alteration of tropomyosin function and folding by a nemaline myopathy-causing mutation. 1110 25

Mutations in tropomyosin (Tm) have been linked to distinct inherited diseases of cardiac and skeletal muscle, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), and nemaline myopathy (NM). How HCM and NM mutations in nearly identical Tm proteins produce the vastly divergent clinical phenotypes of heightened, prolonged cardiac muscle contraction in HCM and skeletal muscle weakness in NM is currently unknown. We report here a direct comparison of the effects of HCM (A63V) and NM (M9R) mutant Tm on membrane-intact myocyte contractile function as assessed by adenoviral gene transfer to fully differentiated cardiac muscle cells. Wild-type, and mutant HCM, and mutant NM proteins were expressed at similar levels in myocytes and incorporated into sarcomeres. Interestingly, HCM mutant Tm produced significantly longer contractions by slowing relaxation, whereas NM mutant Tm produced the opposite effect of accelerated muscle relaxation. We propose slowed relaxation caused by HCM mutant Tm can directly contribute to diastolic dysfunction seen in HCM even without secondary cardiac remodeling. Conversely, hastening of relaxation by NM mutant Tm may shift the force-frequency relationship in skeletal muscle and contribute to muscle weakness seen in NM. Together, these results implicate divergent, abnormal "turning off" of muscle contraction as a cellular basis for the differential pathogenesis of mutant Tm-associated HCM and NM.
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PMID:Divergent abnormal muscle relaxation by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and nemaline myopathy mutant tropomyosins. 1200 76

Four unrelated patients are reported with muscle hypotonia, weakness, skeletal dysmorphism and respiratory insufficiency since childhood. Muscle tissues were found to contain a number of muscle fibres with abnormal structure. Peripherally located structures such as a cap lacking in ATP-ase and fast myosin activity, rich in desmin, tropomyosin and alpha-actinin consisted of abnormally arranged myofibrils. The position of the peripherally situated myofibrils, as well as their abnormal sarcomere pattern, seems to point to an error in fusion and muscle protein synthesis. Whether our cases of congenital myopathy with cap structures are of hereditary origin or of a sporadic type remains unknown, so far. It seems that the result of our study, as well as data presented in the literature, allows us to divede cap disease into two forms: fatal and nonfatal. The morphological changes in the muscle fibres are identical in all the presented cases but the number of muscle fibres with cap structures is much higher in the fatal form.
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PMID:"Cap disease"--a failure in the correct muscle fibre formation. 1216 90

We report three heterozygous missense mutations of the skeletal muscle alpha actin gene (ACTA1) in three unrelated cases of congenital fiber type disproportion (CFTD) from Japan and Australia. This represents the first genetic cause of CFTD to be identified and confirms that CFTD is genetically heterogeneous. The three mutations we have identified Leucine221Proline, Aspartate292Valine, and Proline332Serine are novel. They have not been found previously in any cases of nemaline, actin, intranuclear rod, or rod-core myopathy caused by mutations in ACTA1. It remains unclear why these mutations cause type 1 fiber hypotrophy but no nemaline bodies. The three mutations all lie on one face of the actin monomer on the surface swept by tropomyosin during muscle activity, which may suggest a common pathological mechanism. All three CFTD cases with ACTA1 mutations had severe congenital weakness and respiratory failure without ophthalmoplegia. There were no clinical features specific to CFTD cases with ACTA1 mutations, but the presence of normal eye movements in a severe CFTD patient may be an important clue for the presence of a mutation in ACTA1.
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PMID:Actin mutations are one cause of congenital fibre type disproportion. 1546 86

Nemaline myopathy is a human neuromuscular disorder associated with muscle weakness, Z-line accumulations (rods), and myofibrillar disorganization. Disease-causing mutations have been identified in genes encoding muscle thin filament proteins: actin, nebulin, slow troponin T, betaTropomyosin, and alphaTropomyosin(slow). Skeletal muscle expresses three tropomyosin (Tm) isoforms from separate genes: alphaTm(fast)(alphaTm, TPM1), betaTm (TPM2), and alphaTm(slow) (gammaTm, TPM3). In this article, we show that the level of betaTm, but not alphaTm(fast) protein, is reduced in human patients with mutations in alphaTm(slow) and in a transgenic mouse model of alphaTm(slow)(Met9Arg) nemaline myopathy. A postnatal time course of Tm expression in muscles of the mice indicated that the onset of alphaTm(slow)(Met9Arg) expression coincides with the decline of betaTm. Reduction of betaTm levels is independent of the degree of pathology (rods) within a muscle and is detected before the onset of muscle weakness. Thus, reduction in the level of betaTm represents an early clinical diagnostic marker for alphaTm(slow)-based mutations. Examinations of tropomyosin dimer formation using either recombinant proteins or sarcomeric extracts show that the mutation reduces the formation of the preferred alpha/beta heterodimer. We suggest this perturbation of tropomyosin isoform levels and dimer preference alters sarcomeric thin filament dynamics and contributes to muscle weakness in nemaline myopathy.
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PMID:An alphaTropomyosin mutation alters dimer preference in nemaline myopathy. 1556 13

"Cap myopathy" or "cap disease" is a congenital myopathy characterised by cap-like structures at the periphery of muscle fibres, consisting of disarranged thin filaments with enlarged Z discs. Here we report a deletion in the beta-tropomyosin (TPM2) gene causing cap disease in a 36-year-old male patient with congenital muscle weakness, myopathic facies and respiratory insufficiency. The mutation identified in this patient is an in-frame deletion (c.415_417delGAG) of one codon in exon 4 of TPM2 removing a single glutamate residue (p.Glu139del) from the beta-tropomyosin protein. This is expected to disrupt the seven-amino acid repeat essential for making a coiled coil, and thus to impair tropomyosin-actin interaction. Missense mutations in TPM2 have previously been found to cause rare cases of nemaline myopathy and distal arthrogryposis. This mutation is one not previously described and the first genetic cause identified for cap disease.
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PMID:Cap disease caused by heterozygous deletion of the beta-tropomyosin gene TPM2. 1878 87

In humans, more than 140 different mutations within seven genes (ACTA1, TPM2, TPM3, TNNI2, TNNT1, TNNT3, and NEB) that encode thin filament proteins (skeletal alpha-actin, beta-tropomyosin, gamma-tropomyosin, fast skeletal muscle troponin I, slow skeletal muscle troponin T, fast skeletal muscle troponin T, and nebulin, respectively) have been identified. These mutations have been linked to muscle weakness and various congenital skeletal myopathies including nemaline myopathy, distal arthrogryposis, cap disease, actin myopathy, congenital fiber type disproportion, rod-core myopathy, intranuclear rod myopathy, and distal myopathy, with a dramatic negative impact on the quality of life. In this review, we discuss studies that use various approaches such as patient biopsy specimen samples, tissue culture systems or transgenic animal models, and that demonstrate how thin filament proteins mutations alter muscle structure and contractile function. With an enhanced understanding of the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying muscle weakness in patients carrying such mutations, better therapy strategies can be developed to improve the quality of life.
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PMID:Thin filament proteins mutations associated with skeletal myopathies: defective regulation of muscle contraction. 1857 71

The mechanism of muscle weakness was investigated in an Australian family with an M9R mutation in TPM3 (alpha-tropomyosin(slow)). Detailed protein analyses of 5 muscle samples from 2 patients showed that nemaline bodies are restricted to atrophied Type 1 (slow) fibers in which the TPM3 gene is expressed. Developmental expression studies showed that alpha-tropomyosin(slow) is not expressed at significant levels until after birth, thereby likely explaining the childhood (rather than congenital) disease onset in TPM3 nemaline myopathy. Isoelectric focusing demonstrated that alpha-tropomyosin(slow) dimers, composed of equal ratios of wild-type and M9R-alpha-tropomyosin(slow), are the dominant tropomyosin species in 3 separate muscle groups from an affected patient. These findings suggest that myopathy-related slow fiber predominance likely contributes to the severity of weakness in TPM3 nemaline myopathy because of increased proportions of fibers that express the mutant protein. Using recombinant proteins and far Western blot, we demonstrated a higher affinity of tropomodulin for alpha-tropomyosin(slow) compared with beta-tropomyosin; the M9R substitution within alpha-tropomyosin(slow) greatly reduced this interaction. Finally, transfection of the M9R mutated and wild-type alpha-tropomyosin(slow) into myoblasts revealed reduced incorporation into stress fibers and disruption of the filamentous actin network by the mutant protein. Collectively, these results provide insights into the clinical features and pathogenesis of M9R-TPM3 nemaline myopathy.
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PMID:Disease severity and thin filament regulation in M9R TPM3 nemaline myopathy. 1871 57

Mutations in actin and tropomyosin, identified in patients with myopathic disease have been used in tissue culture models and functional studies with a view to understand how these mutations impact on skeletal muscle structure and function and result in muscle weakness. The likely mode of pathogenesis in these disorders is via a dominant negative effect i.e., the production of 'poison' proteins that interfere with the normal function of the native protein. Tissue culture models and in vitro binding studies highlight the defects of different actin mutants including abnormal folding, aggregation and altered polymerization which would likely impact on skeletal muscle structure and function. The most widely studied mutation in tropomyosin is the M9R substitution identified in a large Australian family with nemaline myopathy. The M9R mutant protein has a reduced affinity for actin, does not bind to tropomodulin in a model peptide and results in reduced sensitivity of isometric force to activating calcium in cardiac myocytes. The pathological consequences of mutations identified in troponin, nebulin, and cofilin are also discussed. Although mutations in alpha-actinin have not been associated with NM, tissue culture models using tagged constructs of different regions of the alpha-actinin gene suggest that this protein plays a role in nemaline body formation.
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PMID:Investigations into the pathobiology of thin-filament myopathies. 1918 Oct 93

The transition of reticulocytes into erythrocytes is accompanied by extensive changes in the structure and properties of the plasma membrane. These changes include an increase in shear resistance, loss of surface area, and acquisition of a biconcave shape. The processes by which these changes are effected have remained largely undefined. Here we examine how the expression of 30 distinct membrane proteins and their interactions change during murine reticulocyte maturation. We show that tubulin and cytosolic actin are lost, whereas the membrane content of myosin, tropomyosin, intercellular adhesion molecule-4, glucose transporter-4, Na-K-ATPase, sodium/hydrogen exchanger 1, glycophorin A, CD47, Duffy, and Kell is reduced. The degradation of tubulin and actin is, at least in part, through the ubiquitin-proteasome degradation pathway. In regard to the protein-protein interactions, the formation of membrane-associated spectrin tetramers from dimers is unperturbed, whereas the interactions responsible for the formation of the membrane-skeletal junctions are weaker in reticulocytes, as is the attachment of transmembrane proteins to these structures. This weakness, in part, results from the elevated phosphorylation of 4.1R in reticulocytes, which leads to a decrease in shear resistance by reducing its interaction with spectrin and actin. These observations begin to unravel the mechanistic basis of crucial changes accompanying reticulocyte maturation.
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PMID:Membrane remodeling during reticulocyte maturation. 2003 85


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