Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Marek Michalak, Michal Opas
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Marek Michalak, Michal Opas
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Marek Michalak, Michal Opas
Dystrophy
Introductory article
Article Contents
. Introduction
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked recessive disorder that affects muscles
and causes progressive weakness. Dystrophin, the product of the DMD gene, is one of
several membrane proteins that form the dystrophinglycoprotein complex, which helps
to maintain the integrity of muscle cells; loss of these proteins leads to the wasting of
muscle cells and to the pathology of DMD.
Introduction
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is one of the most
frequent X-chromosome-linked recessive disorders, occurring in 1 in every 3500 male births. The gene mutated in
DMD encodes for the protein dystrophin. DMD has a very
high mutation rate with characteristic and severe clinical
features. In DMD, a progressive proximal muscle weakness becomes noticeable during early childhood. Muscle
strength continually diminishes and leads to wheelchair
dependence by approximately 12 years of age. Death
usually occurs from chronic respiratory insuciency and/
or cardiac failure. Histologically, DMD is characterized by
progressive degeneration of muscle bres. Although
skeletal muscle weakness is the predominant symptom,
progressive cardiomyopathy is common and can be severe.
In addition to muscle pathology, intellectual impairment
of varying degrees is present in about 30% of all patients
with DMD. Cardiomyopathy is also a predominant
clinical problem in Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), a
milder variant of DMD. BMD is less common than DMD
and has an estimated incidence of approximately 1 in
18 500 births. Clinical manifestation includes slowly
progressive weakness of proximal limb girdle muscles,
hypertrophy of calf muscles and high levels of serum
creatine kinase in addition to cardiomyopathy. Patients
with BMD are usually able to walk and have a normal
lifespan.
. Function of Dystrophin
. Therapies
. Conclusions
Dystrophin
Dystrophin normally resides in skeletal, cardiac and
smooth muscles and is also present in much lower amounts
in the brain and peripheral nerves of several species. In
both muscles and neurons, dystrophin is found in the
plasma membrane and is enriched at the myotendinous
junction and at the postsynaptic membrane of the
Dystrophin
NH+3
COO
Actin filaments
Homology
to -actinin
Spectrin-like
domain
Cysteine-rich
domain
C-terminal domain
Syntrophins
Key
Carbohydrate
Figure 1 Dystrophinglycoprotein complex (DGC). DGC is composed of dystrophin, dystroglycan (a-dystroglycan (156 kDa), b-dystroglycan
(43 kDa)), sarcoglycans (a 50-kDa a-sarcoglycan, a 43-kDa b-sarcoglycan, a 35-kDa g-sarcoglycan, a 35-kDa d-sarcoglycan) and syntrophins (a 54kDa a-syntrophin, a 58-kDa b-syntrophin). a-Dystroglycan binds the extracellular matrix proteins, laminin and agrin, and may interact with sarcoglycans.
The cytoplasmic tail of b-dystroglycan binds to the C-terminus of dystrophin and anchors the protein to the DGC. F-actin (actin filaments) is attached to
dystrophin at multiple sites: at the N-terminus, in the central rod domain, and at the C-terminus of the protein.
dystrophin lacks the cysteine-rich region and the Cterminal domains. Recent transgenic animal studies show
that the cysteine-rich domain of dystrophin is critical for
interacting with DGC in vivo and that disruption of this
interaction renders dystrophin completely nonfunctional.
However, deleting the alternatively spliced, extreme Cterminus of dystrophin has no apparent eect on the
function of dystrophin. Furthermore, overexpression of
Dp71 (the truncated C-terminal region of dystrophin) in
transgenic mdx mice, an animal model of DMD, restores
the level of the DGC; however, it fails to prevent muscle
bres from degenerating.
DystrophinGlycoprotein Complex
Biochemical, molecular biological and immunological
techniques show that dystrophin binds to a large oligomeric complex of proteins and glycoproteins known as the
DGC. The proposed organization of the DGC is shown in
Figure 1. The DGC is formed from dystroglycan, sarcoglycan and syntrophin complexes.
Dystroglycan consists of a 156-kDa extracellular matrix
(ECM) laminin-binding subunit (a-dystroglycan) and a
43-kDa transmembrane subunit (b-dystroglycan). Both aand b-dystroglycans are derived from a common precursor
protein. The two proteins form a continuous link between
laminin-2 and dystrophin. a-Dystroglycan binds to laminin and b-dystroglycan; b-dystroglycan is connected to the
cysteine-rich region of dystrophin (Figure 1). It appears that
the DGC may have more than one function: a role in
communication between the ECM and cell interior, and/or
a role in cytoskeletal organization. At the neuromuscular
junction a-dystroglycan also associates with agrin, a
component of the synaptic basal lamina, and induces the
clustering of acetylcholine receptors.
Sarcoglycans are muscle-specic integral membrane
components of the DGC (Figure 1). The four sarcoglycans
identied to date are: a 50-kDa a-sarcoglycan, a 43-kDa bsarcoglycan, a 35-kDa g-sarcoglycan and a newly identied 35-kDa d-sarcoglycan (Figure 1). Sarcoglycans form a
tight complex; they have a large extracellular domain and a
relatively short cytoplasmic region. The muscular dystrophies arising from mutations in a-, b- and g-sarcoglycans
are now classied as limb girdle muscular dystrophy
(LGMD) types 2D, E and C, respectively (Table 1). The
gene responsible for LGMD2A encodes for calpain-3, a
calcium-dependent protease.
LGMD is characterized by loss of the entire sarcoglycan
complex from the sarcolemma membrane. One sarcoglycan may destabilize the complex and/or increase susceptibility to proteolysis during biosynthesis and assembly. A
novel component of the sarcoglycan, a 35-kDa d-sarcoglycan, was recently identied. Mutations in the d-sarcoglycan gene are responsible for LGMD2F. To date there is no
Protein product
Locus
Dystrophin
Dystrophin
Emerin
Xp21
Xp21
Xq28
Calpain-3
Not known
LGMD2C
LGMD2D
LGMD2E
LGMD2F
g-Sarcoglycan
a-Sarcoglycan
b-Sarcoglycan
d-Sarcoglycan
15q15
2p1214
13q12
17q12
4q12
5q3334
Not known
5q
Function of Dystrophin
Therapies
Conclusions
Signicant progress has been made in understanding the
molecular organization of the DGC through molecular
cloning of new sarcoglycan, syntrophins and DRP2.
Research on the structure and function of dystrophin
and its associated glycoproteins should further advance
our understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of
muscular dystrophies. This will be critical for development
of new approaches to DMD therapy.
Further Reading