Defects in integrin complex formation promote CHKB -mediated muscular dystrophy.
Mahtab TavasoliChristopher R McMasterPublished in: Life science alliance (2024)
Phosphatidylcholine (PC) is the major membrane phospholipid in most eukaryotic cells. Bi-allelic loss of function variants in CHKB , encoding the first step in the synthesis of PC, is the cause of a rostrocaudal muscular dystrophy in both humans and mice. Loss of sarcolemma integrity is a hallmark of muscular dystrophies; however, how this occurs in the absence of choline kinase function is not known. We determine that in Chkb -/- mice there is a failure of the α7β1 integrin complex that is specific to affected muscle. We observed that in Chkb -/- hindlimb muscles there is a decrease in sarcolemma association/abundance of the PI(4,5)P 2 binding integrin complex proteins vinculin, and α-actinin, and a decrease in actin association with the sarcolemma. In cells, pharmacological inhibition of choline kinase activity results in internalization of a fluorescent PI(4,5)P 2 reporter from discrete plasma membrane clusters at the cell surface membrane to cytosol, this corresponds with a decreased vinculin localization at plasma membrane focal adhesions that was rescued by overexpression of CHKB .
Keyphrases
- muscular dystrophy
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- cell surface
- duchenne muscular dystrophy
- cell migration
- high fat diet induced
- tyrosine kinase
- skeletal muscle
- cell proliferation
- type diabetes
- crispr cas
- transcription factor
- protein kinase
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- fatty acid
- cell death
- living cells
- body composition
- adipose tissue
- dna binding
- high intensity
- binding protein