PLOS Currents Muscular Dystrophy

  • Log in
  • Home
  • Aims & Scope
  • Review Board
    • Reviewer Guide
  • Authors ↓
    • Author Guide
    • Figure Creation
    • Table Creation
    • Equation Creation
    • Reference Creation
    • Author FAQ
  • Resources
  • About
    • Guildelines for Comments

Dysferlinopathy Fibroblasts Are Defective in Plasma Membrane Repair

October 29, 2015 · Pathogenetic Mechanisms

Background: Dysferlin is a sarcolemmal protein that is defective in Miyoshi myopathy and limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B, and is involved in sarcolemmal repair. Primary cultured myoblasts and myotubes established from patient muscle biopsies have been widely utilized to explore the molecular mechanism of dysferlinopathy.

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to explore the possible utility of dermal fibroblasts from dysferlin-deficient patients and SJL mice as a tool for studying dysferlinopathy.

Methods: Dysferlin protein expression in fibroblasts from dysferlin-deficient patients and SJL mice was analyzed by immunoblotting and immunocytochemistry. The membrane wound-repair assay was performed on the fibroblasts using a confocal microscope equipped with a UV-laser. The membrane blebbing assay using hypotonic shock, in which normal membrane blebbing is detected only in the presence of dysferlin, was also performed using human and mouse fibroblasts.

Results: Mis-sense mutated dysferlin was expressed at a very low level in fibroblasts from a dysferlinopathy patient, and lower expression level of truncated dysferlin was observed in SJL mouse fibroblast. Fibroblasts from patients with dysferlinopathy and SJL mice showed attenuated membrane repair and did not form membrane blebs in response to hypoosmotic shock. Proteosomal inhibitior increased mis-sense mutated or truncated dysferlin levels, and restored membrane blebbing, however, proteosomal inhibition failed to improve levels of dysferlin with non-sense or frame-shift mutation.

Conclusion: Fibroblasts from dysferlinopathy patients and SJL mice showed attenuated plasma membrane repair, and could be a tool for studying dysferlinopathy.

A proteasome inhibitor fails to attenuate dystrophic pathology in mdx mice

June 27, 2012 · Pathogenetic Mechanisms

Dystrophin deficiency leads to increased proteasome activity in skeletal muscle. Previous observations suggest short-term inhibition of the proteasome restores dystrophin expression. Contrary to our hypothesis, eight days of MG-132 administration to mdx mice increased susceptibility to contraction induced injury and Evan’s blue dye penetration compared to controls. Following six weeks of MG-132 administration muscle function was similar to control animals. These data suggest that proteasome inhibition does not reduce the severity of muscle dysfunction caused by dystrophin-deficiency.

Call for Submissions

Newsletter signup

Sign Up for the  PLOS Currents MD Newsletter

Twitter

Tweets about "@ploscurrentsmd OR #ploscurrentsmd OR currents.plos.org/md/ OR \"PLOS Currents Muscular Dystrophy\" OR \"PLOS Currents MD\" lang:en"
  • Home
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Statement
  • About
  • Contact