Integrated multi-omics approach reveals the role of SPEG in skeletal muscle biology including its relationship with myospryn complex.
Qifei LiJasmine LinShiyu LuoKlaus Schmitz-AbeRohan AgrawalMelissa MengBehzad MoghadaszadehAlan H BeggsXiaoli LiuMark A PerrellaPankaj B AgrawalPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
(striated preferentially expressed protein) with a recessive form of centronuclear myopathy and/or dilated cardiomyopathy and have characterized a striated muscle-specific SPEG-deficient mouse model that recapitulates human disease with disruption of the triad structure and calcium homeostasis in skeletal muscles. In this study, we applied multi-omics approaches (interactomic, proteomic, phosphoproteomic, and transcriptomic analyses) in the skeletal muscles of SPEG-deficient mice to assess the underlying pathways associated with the pathological and molecular abnormalities. SPEG interacts with myospryn complex proteins (CMYA5, FSD2, RyR1), and its deficiency results in myospryn complex abnormalities.SPEG regulates RyR1 phosphorylation at S2902, and its loss affects JPH2 phosphorylation at multiple sites.SPEGα and SPEGβ have different interacting partners suggestive of differential function.Transcriptome analysis indicates dysregulated pathways of ECM-receptor interaction and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor signaling.Mitochondrial defects on the transcriptome, proteome, and electron microscopy, may be a consequence of defective calcium signaling.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- single cell
- mouse model
- endothelial cells
- electron microscopy
- rna seq
- gene expression
- oxidative stress
- insulin resistance
- genome wide
- adipose tissue
- autism spectrum disorder
- small molecule
- muscular dystrophy
- type diabetes
- intellectual disability
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- protein protein
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected