Elimination of fukutin reveals cellular and molecular pathomechanisms in muscular dystrophy-associated heart failure.
Yoshihiro UjiharaMotoi KanagawaSatoshi MohriSatomi TakatsuKazuhiro KobayashiTatsushi TodaKeiji NaruseYuki KatanosakaPublished in: Nature communications (2019)
Heart failure is the major cause of death for muscular dystrophy patients, however, the molecular pathomechanism remains unknown. Here, we show the detailed molecular pathogenesis of muscular dystrophy-associated cardiomyopathy in mice lacking the fukutin gene (Fktn), the causative gene for Fukuyama muscular dystrophy. Although cardiac Fktn elimination markedly reduced α-dystroglycan glycosylation and dystrophin-glycoprotein complex proteins in sarcolemma at all developmental stages, cardiac dysfunction was observed only in later adulthood, suggesting that membrane fragility is not the sole etiology of cardiac dysfunction. During young adulthood, Fktn-deficient mice were vulnerable to pathological hypertrophic stress with downregulation of Akt and the MEF2-histone deacetylase axis. Acute Fktn elimination caused severe cardiac dysfunction and accelerated mortality with myocyte contractile dysfunction and disordered Golgi-microtubule networks, which were ameliorated with colchicine treatment. These data reveal fukutin is crucial for maintaining myocyte physiology to prevent heart failure, and thus, the results may lead to strategies for therapeutic intervention.
Keyphrases
- muscular dystrophy
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- duchenne muscular dystrophy
- oxidative stress
- histone deacetylase
- genome wide
- signaling pathway
- acute heart failure
- depressive symptoms
- newly diagnosed
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- randomized controlled trial
- atrial fibrillation
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- intensive care unit
- drug induced
- adipose tissue
- cardiovascular events
- electronic health record
- risk factors
- prognostic factors
- cardiovascular disease
- single cell
- hepatitis b virus
- transcription factor
- deep learning
- smooth muscle
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- artificial intelligence
- mechanical ventilation
- wild type