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Silencing of the Ca 2+ Channel ORAI1 Improves the Multi-Systemic Phenotype of Tubular Aggregate Myopathy (TAM) and Stormorken Syndrome (STRMK) in Mice.

Roberto Silva-RojasLaura Pérez-GuàrdiaEmma LafabrieDavid MoulaertJocelyn LaporteJohann Böhm
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Tubular aggregate myopathy (TAM) and Stormorken syndrome (STRMK) form a clinical continuum associating progressive muscle weakness with additional multi-systemic anomalies of the bones, skin, spleen, and platelets. TAM/STRMK arises from excessive extracellular Ca 2+ entry due to gain-of-function mutations in the Ca 2+ sensor STIM1 or the Ca 2+ channel ORAI1. Currently, no treatment is available. Here we assessed the therapeutic potential of ORAI1 downregulation to anticipate and reverse disease development in a faithful mouse model carrying the most common TAM/STRMK mutation and recapitulating the main signs of the human disorder. To this aim, we crossed Stim1 R304W/+ mice with Orai1 +/- mice expressing 50% of ORAI1. Systematic phenotyping of the offspring revealed that the Stim1 R304W/+ Orai1 +/- mice were born with a normalized ratio and showed improved postnatal growth, bone architecture, and partly ameliorated muscle function and structure compared with their Stim1 R304W/+ littermates. We also produced AAV particles containing Orai1 -specific shRNAs, and intramuscular injections of Stim1 R304W/+ mice improved the skeletal muscle contraction and relaxation properties, while muscle histology remained unchanged. Altogether, we provide the proof-of-concept that Orai1 silencing partially prevents the development of the multi-systemic TAM/STRMK phenotype in mice, and we also established an approach to target Orai1 expression in postnatal tissues.
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