| Literature DB >> 22918376 |
Homa Tajsharghi1, Anders Oldfors.
Abstract
The myosin heavy chain (MyHC) is the molecular motor of muscle and forms the backbone of the sarcomere thick filaments. Different MyHC isoforms are of importance for the physiological properties of different muscle fiber types. Hereditary myosin myopathies have emerged as an important group of diseases with variable clinical and morphological expression depending on the mutated isoform and type and location of the mutation. Dominant mutations in developmental MyHC isoform genes (MYH3 and MYH8) are associated with distal arthrogryposis syndromes. Dominant or recessive mutations affecting the type IIa MyHC (MYH2) are associated with early-onset myopathies with variable muscle weakness and ophthalmoplegia as a consistent finding. Myopathies with scapuloperoneal, distal or limb-girdle muscle weakness including entities, such as myosin storage myopathy and Laing distal myopathy are the result of usually dominant mutations in the gene for slow/β cardiac MyHC (MYH7). Protein aggregation is part of the features in some of these myopathies. In myosin storage myopathy protein aggregates are formed by accumulation of myosin beneath the sarcolemma and between myofibrils. In vitro studies on the effects of different mutations associated with myosin storage myopathy and Laing distal myopathy indicate altered biochemical and biophysical properties of the light meromyosin, which is essential for thick filament assembly. Protein aggregates in the form of tubulofilamentous inclusions in association with vacuolated muscle fibers are present at late stage of dominant myosin IIa myopathy and sometimes in Laing distal myopathy. These protein aggregates exhibit features indicating defective degradation of misfolded proteins. In addition to protein aggregation and muscle fiber degeneration some of the myosin mutations cause functional impairment of the molecular motor adding to the pathogenesis of myosinopathies.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22918376 PMCID: PMC3535372 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-012-1024-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1a Electron micrograph of a skeletal muscle sarcomere, demonstrating thick and thin filaments and the banding pattern. b Schematic drawing of the sarcomere demonstrating the thin filaments composed mainly of actin, tropomyosin and the troponin complex and the thick filaments composed mainly of myosin with the myosin heavy chain (MyHC) globular heads interacting with the thin filaments. c Illustration of the MyHC dimer with approximate binding sites for ATP, actin, myosin-binding protein C, myomesin-1, M-protein and titin. The assembly competence domain in the distal rod region is indicated. The different regions of the MyHC (S1, S2 and light meromyosin, LMM) are indicated by different colors
Myosin heavy chain isoforms expressed in human muscle
| Protein | Gene | Muscle fiber type |
|---|---|---|
| MyHC IIx/d |
| Type 2B |
| MyHC IIa |
| Type 2A Extraocular muscle |
| Embryonic MyHC |
| Fetal development Muscle regeneration |
| α-cardiac MyHC |
| Heart atria |
MyHC I β-Cardiac MyHC |
| Type 1 Heart ventricles |
| Fetal MyHC |
| Fetal development Muscle regeneration |
| Smooth muscle MyHC |
| Smooth muscle |
| Extraocular MyHC |
| Extraocular muscle |
Myopathies associated with mutations in skeletal muscle myosin heavy chains
| Gene | Disease | Major clinical characteristics | Skeletal muscle pathology |
|---|---|---|---|
MyHC IIa | Autosomal dominant myopathy with congenital joint contractures, ophthalmoplegia and rimmed vacuoles
| Congenital, reversible joint contractures. Ophthalmoplegia. Mild proximal muscle weakness in childhood. Progressive course in some adults affecting ambulation | Rimmed vacuoles with |
| Autosomal recessive myopathy with ophthalmoplegia | Mild to moderate muscle weakness, usually mild facial involvement. Ophthalmoplegia | Complete absence of type 2A muscle fibers. Variable, unspecific myopathic changes with fatty infiltration. Type 2B fibers may be lacking. | |
Embryonic MyHC | DA1 Freeman-Sheldon syndrome, DA2A,
Sheldon-Hall syndrome, DA2B, | Multiple congenital joint contractures with predominant distal involvement. No muscle weakness | Minor unspecific changes |
MyHC I (ß-cardiac MyHC) | Familial hypertrophic/dilated cardiomyopathy,
| Cardiac failure, arrhythmia, sudden cardiac arrest | Irregular structure with cores in type 1 muscle fibers in some patients |
Myosin storage myopathy
| Onset from childhood to middle age. Weakness of limb girdle, scapuloperoneal or distal muscles. Mild weakness or severe weakness affecting ambulation | Subsarcolemmal | |
Laing early-onset distal myopathy,
| Usually onset of distal muscle weakness in childhood, but may be much later. Slowly progressive course with initial weakness of ankle dorsiflexion and “hanging big toe” sign | Fiber size variability, internalized nuclei, frequently small type 1 fibers. Dystrophic changes may occur. Rimmed vacuoles and | |
| Scapuloperoneal and limb girdle syndromes | Scapuloperoneal or limb girdle muscle weakness without morphological features of myosin storage | Unspecific changes including fiber type disproportion | |
Fetal MyHC | Trismus and pseudocamtodactyly syndrome, DA7
| Congenital contractures of hands, feet and jaws with trismus and hand and foot deformities with pseudocamptodactyly | Not described |
EM Electron microscopy
Fig. 2Dominant myosin IIa myopathy. Biopsy of the deltoid muscle of a 38-year-old man showing alterations of the type 2A fibers (arrows). NADH-tetrazolium reductase
Fig. 3Dominant myosin IIa myopathy. Biopsy of the quadriceps muscle of a 38-year-old man demonstrating variability of fiber size, increased interstitial connective tissue, and frequent fibers with rimmed vacuoles. a Hematoxylin and eosin; b Gomori trichrome
Fig. 4Dominant myosin IIa myopathy. Several muscle fibers show inclusions that are immunoreactive to antibodies against p62 (a) and ubiquitin (b). Amyloid is present in a few inclusions as revealed by Congo staining and fluorescence microscopy with Texas red filter (c)
Fig. 5Dominant myosin IIa myopathy. Electron microscopy reveals a filamentous inclusion (arrow) associated with a rimmed vacuole with degradation products
Fig. 6Dominant myosin IIa myopathy. Electron microscopy demonstrating an inclusion composed of 15–20 nm tubulofilaments
Fig. 7Electron micrograph illustrating intranuclear filaments (arrow) in dominant myosin IIa myopathy
Fig. 8Mutation in MYH7 associated with myosin storage myopathy. They are all located in the distal rod region of the MyHC
Fig. 9Myosin storage myopathy. There is fatty infiltration and numerous muscle fibers with subsarcolemmal accumulation of material (arrows) that stains faintly red by hematoxylin–eosin (a) is unstained by NADH-tetrazolium reductase (b) and stains light green in Gomori trichrome (c)
Fig. 10Myosin storage myopathy. The inclusions (arrows) appear unstructured in hematoxylin-eosin (a) and are surrounded by a rim of desmin (b). The inclusions are immunoreactive with antibodies against slow/β cardiac MyHC (c) and ubiquitin (d)
Fig. 11Myosin storage myopathy. The inclusions are surrounded by a rim of increased succinate dehydrogenase activity (arrows) (a), which corresponds to the presence of numerous mitochondria (arrows) around but not within the inclusions as revealed by electron microscopy (b). There is also storage material between surrounding myofibrils (arrow heads)
Fig. 12Myosin storage myopathy. Electron microscopy of storage material. a The inclusions are not limited by any membrane but instead the storage material can be seen surrounding the adjacent myofibrils (arrows). b The storage material appears granular and party filamentous and some glycogen particles are also present
Fig. 13Mutations in MYH7 associated with distal myopathy. They are mainly located in mid-rod region of the MyHC, but some are located in the globular myosin head and the distal rod
Fig. 14Tibialis anterior muscle of a 7-year-old boy with MYH7-associated distal myopathy. Many of the type 1 fibers are small (arrows). a Myofibrillar ATPase, pH 4.3 and b NADH-tetrazolium reductase
Fig. 15The assembly of MyHC LMM rod domain into coiled-coil α-helices. The heptad repeat motif forms the structural basis for the LMM coiled-coil dimer. The cross-section of the double α-helix coiled-coil with the heptad repeat sequences. While the residues at positions a and d form the core of the α-helix, the residues at positions b, c, e, f and g are located at the outer region of the coiled-coil