Aberrant regulation of epigenetic modifiers contributes to the pathogenesis in patients with selenoprotein N-related myopathies.
Christoph BachmannFaiza NoreenNicol C VoermansPrimo L SchärJohn VissingJohanna M FockSaskia BulkBenno KustersSteven A MooreAlan H BeggsKatherine D MathewsMegan MeyerCasie A GenettiGiovanni MeolaRosanna CardaniEmma MathewsHeinz JungbluthFrancesco MuntoniFrancesco ZorzatoSusan TrevesPublished in: Human mutation (2019)
Congenital myopathies are early onset, slowly progressive neuromuscular disorders of variable severity. They are genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous and caused by pathogenic variants in several genes. Multi-minicore Disease, one of the more common congenital myopathies, is frequently caused by recessive variants in either SELENON, encoding the endoplasmic reticulum glycoprotein selenoprotein N or RYR1, encoding a protein involved in calcium homeostasis and excitation-contraction coupling. The mechanism by which recessive SELENON variants cause Multiminicore disease (MmD) is unclear. Here, we extensively investigated muscle physiological, biochemical and epigenetic modifications, including DNA methylation, histone modification, and noncoding RNA expression, to understand the pathomechanism of MmD. We identified biochemical changes that are common in patients harboring recessive RYR1 and SELENON variants, including depletion of transcripts encoding proteins involved in skeletal muscle calcium homeostasis, increased levels of Class II histone deacetylases (HDACs) and DNA methyltransferases. CpG methylation analysis of genomic DNA of patients with RYR1 and SELENON variants identified >3,500 common aberrantly methylated genes, many of which are involved in calcium signaling. These results provide the proof of concept for the potential use of drugs targeting HDACs and DNA methyltransferases to treat patients with specific forms of congenital myopathies.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- copy number
- genome wide
- early onset
- skeletal muscle
- gene expression
- circulating tumor
- end stage renal disease
- cell free
- endoplasmic reticulum
- intellectual disability
- late onset
- nucleic acid
- single molecule
- poor prognosis
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- autism spectrum disorder
- newly diagnosed
- peritoneal dialysis
- multiple sclerosis
- insulin resistance
- prognostic factors
- binding protein
- muscular dystrophy
- adipose tissue
- circulating tumor cells
- smooth muscle
- mass spectrometry
- climate change
- ionic liquid
- small molecule
- atomic force microscopy
- quantum dots