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Human skeletal myopathy myosin mutations disrupt myosin head sequestration

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posted on 2024-02-06, 09:05 authored by Glenn Carrington, Abbi Hau, Sarah Kosta, Hannah DugdaleHannah Dugdale, Francesco Muntoni, Adele D’Amico, Peter Van den Bergh, Norma B Romero, Edoardo Malfatti, Juan Jesus Vilchez, Anders Oldfors, Sander Pajusalu, Katrin Õunap, Marta Giralt-Pujol, Edmar Zanoteli, Kenneth S Campbell, Hiroyuki Iwamoto, Michelle Peckham, Julien Ochala
Myosin heavy chains encoded by MYH7 and MYH2 are abundant in human skeletal muscle and important for muscle contraction. However, it is unclear how mutations in these genes disrupt myosin structure and function leading to skeletal muscle myopathies termed myosinopathies. Here, we used multiple approaches to analyze the effects of common MYH7 and MYH2 mutations in the light meromyosin (LMM) region of myosin. Analyses of expressed and purified MYH7 and MYH2 LMM mutant proteins combined with in silico modeling showed that myosin coiled coil structure and packing of filaments in vitro are commonly disrupted. Using muscle biopsies from patients and fluorescent ATP analog chase protocols to estimate the proportion of myosin heads that were super-relaxed, together with x-ray diffraction measurements to estimate myosin head order, we found that basal myosin ATP consumption was increased and the myosin super-relaxed state was decreased in vivo. In addition, myofiber mechanics experiments to investigate contractile function showed that myofiber contractility was not affected. These findings indicate that the structural remodeling associated with LMM mutations induces a pathogenic state in which formation of shutdown heads is impaired, thus increasing myosin head ATP demand in the filaments, rather than affecting contractility. These key findings will help design future therapies for myosinopathies.

Funding

Understanding the mechanisms underlying myosinopathies

Medical Research Council

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Muscular Dystrophy UK (17GROPS48-0077)

NIH (HL148785)

The detection of new rare genetic diseases in children.

Estonian Research Council

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Oligogenic inheritance in genetic diseases

Estonian Research Council

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The diagnostics and prevalence of rare congenital myopathies and neurometabolic disorders.

Estonian Research Council

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Multifunctional imaging of living cells for biomedical sciences.

Wellcome Trust

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History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

JCI Insight

Volume

8

Issue

21

Publisher

American Society for Clinical Investigation

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Rights holder

© Carrington et al.

Publisher statement

This is an Open Access Article. It is published by the American Society for Clinical Investigation under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Acceptance date

2023-09-20

Publication date

2023-11-08

Copyright date

2023

eISSN

2379-3708

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Hannah Dugdale. Deposit date: 5 February 2024

Article number

e172322

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