| Literature DB >> 23143191 |
Christoph S Clemen1, Harald Herrmann, Sergei V Strelkov, Rolf Schröder.
Abstract
The intermediate filament protein desmin is an essential component of the extra-sarcomeric cytoskeleton in muscle cells. This three-dimensional filamentous framework exerts central roles in the structural and functional alignment and anchorage of myofibrils, the positioning of cell organelles and signaling events. Mutations of the human desmin gene on chromosome 2q35 cause autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, and sporadic myopathies and/or cardiomyopathies with marked phenotypic variability. The disease onset ranges from childhood to late adulthood. The clinical course is progressive and no specific treatment is currently available for this severely disabling disease. The muscle pathology is characterized by desmin-positive protein aggregates and degenerative changes of the myofibrillar apparatus. The molecular pathophysiology of desminopathies is a complex, multilevel issue. In addition to direct effects on the formation and maintenance of the extra-sarcomeric intermediate filament network, mutant desmin affects essential protein interactions, cell signaling cascades, mitochondrial functions, and protein quality control mechanisms. This review summarizes the currently available data on the epidemiology, clinical phenotypes, myopathology, and genetics of desminopathies. In addition, this work provides an overview on the expression, filament formation processes, biomechanical properties, post-translational modifications, interaction partners, subcellular localization, and functions of wild-type and mutant desmin as well as desmin-related cell and animal models.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23143191 PMCID: PMC3535371 DOI: 10.1007/s00401-012-1057-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol ISSN: 0001-6322 Impact factor: 17.088
Fig. 1Protein aggregation pathology and mitochondrial abnormalities in desminopathies. Arrows and double arrows in a and b denote pathological protein aggregates in the sarcoplasm and in the subsarcolemmal region, respectively. Arrowhead and double arrowhead in c highlight a rubbed-out lesion and a core-like lesion, respectively
Fig. 2Indirect immunofluorescence labeling of desmin and αB-crystallin in a desminopathy. Note the presence of sarcoplasmic and subsarcolemmal pathological protein aggregates
Fig. 3Electron microscopy findings in desminopathies. Asterisks denote the presence of granulofilamentous material in the subsarcolemmal region. White arrows depict electron-dense granular deposits; black arrows highlight filamentous material. ECM extracellular matrix, M mitochondrion
Fig. 4Structural organization of the human desmin molecule and molecular model of its dimeric rod domain. a The black boxes represent α-helical segments designated “coil.” Segments of unknown structure connecting coil 1A and coil 1B as well as coil 1B and coil 2 are termed linkers L1 and L12, respectively. Non-structured amino- (“head”) and carboxy- (“tail”) terminal domains are depicted as colored bars. Numbers indicate the amino acid position of the domain borders. b The molecular model of the dimeric desmin coiled coil domain is based on its high structural homology to the corresponding vimentin domain [33]. The three α-helical segments (coil 1A, coil 1B and coil 2) are shown as black ribbons. The linkers L1 and L12 are in grey. The first segment (coil 1A) has only a weak tendency to form coiled coils [33]. Locations of pathogenic mutations are mapped in orange (missense mutations), purple (deletions), and cyan (truncations). For clarity, mutation sites in only one chain of the dimer are marked. The mutations within the unstructured head and tail domains are also listed; see also Table 1
Human desmin mutations, clinical phenotypes, myopathology, and related in vitro data
| Row no. | Domain | Mutation | Mutation type | Mode of inheritance | Phenotype | Histology | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Head | Ser2lle | Missense | AD | gM, cM, ri | sva | [ |
| 2 | Ser7Phe | Missense (Fig. 2 of reference) | AD | n.a. | n.a. | [ | |
| 3 | Ser12Phe | Missense | AD | pM, dM, cM, ary | sva, atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 4 | Ser13Phe | Missense | AD | pM, dM, cM, ary | sva, atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 5 | Arg16Cys | Missense | AR | cM, ary | atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 6 | Ser46Phe | Missense | AD | n.a. | sva | [ | |
| 7 | Ser46Tyr | Missense | AD | n.a. | sva | [ | |
| 8 | Coil 1A | Glu108Lys | Missense | AD | cM, ary | n.a. | [ |
| 9 | Gln113fsX115 | Frame shift | SP | gM, cM, ary | sva, intN | [ | |
| 10 | Glu114del | Small in-frame deletion | AD | gM, cM, ary | sva, intN, ppa | [ | |
| 11 | Asn116Ser | Missense | SP | (gM), cM, ary | sva, atf | [ | |
| 12 | Lys144X | Frame shift | AD | gM, cM, ary, ri | n.a. | [ | |
| 13 | Coil 1B | Arg173_Glu179del | Small in-frame deletion | AR | gM, cM, ri, ary | atf, intN, ppa | |
| 14 | Ala213Val | Missense, putative polymorphism | AD, SP | pM, dM, cM, ary | Necrosis, ppa | [ | |
| 15 | Asp214_Glu245del | Splice site mutations leading to loss of exon 3: c.640-2A>T, c.640-1 G>A, c.735G>C, c.735G>T, c.735 + 1G>A, c.735 + 3A>G | AD, SP | gM, pM, cM, 4par, ary, ri | sva, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 16 | Lys240del | Small in-frame deletion, corrected from p.Lys239fsX242 (*) | AD | gM pM, ary | sva, ppa | [ | |
| 17 | Glu245Asp | Missense | AD | gM 4par, cM, ary, (ri) | sva, atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 18 | Coil 2 | Leu274Arg | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | sva, intN | [ |
| 19 | Leu274Pro | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | sva, intN | [ | |
| 20 | Ser298Leu | Missense | AD | cM ary | n.a. | [ | |
| 21 | Asp312Asn | Missense | AD | cM | n.a. | [ | |
| 22 | Arg335Pro | Missense | AD | gM ary | sva, intN | [ | |
| 23 | Asp336Tyr | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | n.a. | [ | |
| 24 | Ala337Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | atf, intN, ppa | [ | |
| 25 | Leu338Arg | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, ri | ppa | [ | |
| 26 | Asp339Tyr | Missense | SP | dM ri | n.a. | [ | |
| 27 | Asn342Asp | Missense | AD, SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ri, ary | atf, intN, ppa | [ | |
| 28 | Leu345Pro | Missense | AD | pM dM, cM, ary | sva, atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 29 | Arg350Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, spM, cM, ary | sva, atf, intN | [ | |
| 30 | Arg350Trp | Missense | AD | cM | n.a. | [ | |
| 31 | Arg355Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM,dM,cM | sva, atf, intN | [ | |
| 32 | Ala357Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, spM, ri | atf, ppa | [ | |
| 33 | Glu359_Ser361del | Small in-frame deletion | AD | gM pM,dM | atf, ppa | [ | |
| 34 | Ala360Pro | Missense, compound heterozygote (Asn393lle) | AR | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | atf, intN, ppa | [ | |
| 35 | Asn366del | Small in-frame deletion | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | ppa | [ | |
| 36 | Ne367Phe | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | sva, intN, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 37 | Leu370Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | sva, atf, intN, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 38 | Leu377Pro | Missense | SP | gM cM, ri | n.a. | [ | |
| 39 | Leu385Pro | Missense | SP | gM cM, ary, ri | sva | [ | |
| 40 | Gln389Pro | Missense | SP | pM dM, cM, ary | sva, ppa | [ | |
| 41 | Leu392Pro | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | sva, intN, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 42 | Asn393lle | Missense, compound heterozygote (Ala360Pro) | AR | gM cM, ary, ri | atf, intN, ppa | [ | |
| 43 | Asp399Tyr | Missense | AD | pM dM, cM, ri, ary | atf, ppa | [ | |
| 44 | Glu401Lys | Missense | SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | atf, ppa, rvac | [ | |
| 45 | Arg406Trp | Missense | AD, SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | atf, intN | [ | |
| 46 | Tail | Glu413Lys | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM, cM, ary | sva, atf, intN, ppa | [ |
| 47 | Glu413Arg | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | n.a. | [ | |
| 48 | Arg415Trp | Missense (Fig. 2 of reference) | AD | n.a | n.a. | [ | |
| 49 | Pro419Ser | Missense | AD | gM pM, dM,cM, ary | sva, intN, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 50 | Glu439Lys | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | n.a. | [ | |
| 51 | Thr442lle | Missense | AD, SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ary | atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 52 | Thr445Ala | Missense | SP | gM ri | atf, intN, rvac | [ | |
| 53 | Lys449Thr | Missense | AD, SP | n.a | n.a. | [ | |
| 54 | lle451Met | Missense | AD, SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ri | atf, intN, rvac, ppa | [ | |
| 55 | Thr453lle | Missense | AD, SP | cM ary | ppa | [ | |
| 56 | Arg454Trp | Missense | AD, SP | gM pM, dM, cM, ary, ri | atf, ppa | [ | |
| 57 | Glu457Val | Missense | AD | gM cM, ary | sva, atf, intN | [ | |
| 58 | Val459lle | Missense | AD | cM ary | n.a. | [ | |
| 59 | Ser460lle | Missense | AD | pM dM, cM, ary | sva, atf, rvac | [ | |
| 60 | Val469Met | Missense | AD | pM dM,cM | n.a. | [ | |
| 61 | X471Tyr | Missense/loss of stop codon | AD | pM dM, ary | n.a. | [ |
As of June 2012, 67 disease causing mutations of the DES gene have been published, which may give rise to the expression of 61 different mutant forms of the desmin protein. In addition, two French patients with a virtually complete lack of desmin protein expression due to a homozygous 22-bp deletion in exon 6 (mutation not further specified, therefore not listed in Table 1) have been described [31]. GenBank entry NM_001927.3 was used as desmin reference sequence; nucleotide numbering refers to the cDNA sequence with +1 corresponding to the A of the ATG start codon. Note of caution (*): The p.Lys239fsX242 insertion mutation, which subsequently had been corrected into p.Lys240del, erroneously has been cited as “ins245” [137] or “Glu245X” in few later publications [27, 178]. Cell types in brackets in the columns “Transfection into” are described in the main text
Abbreviations in alphabetical order: 4par tetraparesis, abc aB-crystallin, AD autosomal dominant, Agg aggregates, AR autosomal recessive, ary cardiac arrhythmia, atf atrophic fibres, cM cardiac myopathy, des desmin, dM distal myopathy, dys dystrophin, flnc filamin-C, FNF filament/network formation, GFM granulofilamentous material, gM generalized myopathy, intN internalized nuclei, Irw irregular filament width, n.a. not available, NSA negative-stained assemblies, plc plectin, pM proximal myopathy, ppa pathological protein aggregates/inclusions/deposits, ri respiratory insufficiency, rvac rimmed vacuoles, SFF short filament formation, SP sporadic, spM scapuloperoneal myopathy, sva size variability, syn synemin, ubi ubiquitin, ULF unit length filaments/ULF-like blobs, vim vimentin
Fig. 5Schematic model of cytoplasmic IF assembly. a Two dimers associate in an anti-parallel, half-staggered fashion by overlap of the two coiled coils via their coil1, i.e., coil 1A and coil 1B (brown segments). b Upon initiation of assembly conditions the tetramers associate laterally into a unit-length filament (ULF). In vimentin, a ULF counts eight tetramers on the average [76]. c Individual ULFs may longitudinally anneal with another ULF (c1) or with a filament consisting of two annealed ULFs (c2); eventually, two short filaments may longitudinally anneal to a longer filament (c3). d Upon extended incubation, long filaments will spontaneously reduce their diameter by radial compaction to form a mature IF [76]. The figure is redrawn and modified after [79]
Fig. 6Schematic of the desmin IF network in relation to the myofibrillar apparatus. In desminopathies, mutant desmin leads to structural and functional changes of the extrasarcomeric cytoskeleton, pathological protein aggregation, mitochondrial abnormalities, and signs of myofibrillar degeneration
Fig. 7Indirect immunofluorescence labeling of desmin and syncoilin in an isolated muscle fiber from a desminopathy. Note the presence of multiple pathological protein aggregates in addition to the normal cross-striated staining pattern of these two proteins
Fig. 8Ectopic expression of mutant desmin in cultured cells. The desmin mutant p.Arg406Trp was transfected into (a) IF-free human SW13 cells; b vimentin- and desmin-free bovine mammary gland cells (BMGE+H) containing cytokeratins; and c into mouse fibroblast 3T3 cells. Detection was by specific primary and secondary antibodies: desmin stain in green, vimentin in red. Note that the p.Arg406Trp desmin mutant does not form filaments on its own, and also in the vimentin-containing cell the desmin mutant protein stays particulate. Note furthermore that the vimentin system is re-organized (“collapsed”) around the nucleus as a consequence of the mutant desmin expression. In contrast to wild-type desmin, the mutant does not integrate into vimentin filaments [11]. Similarly, the desmin mutant p.Leu345Pro (proline is often called a “helix breaker”) segregates from the endogenous vimentin system when transfected into 3T3 cells: d desmin antibody staining; e vimentin antibody staining; f merged image highlighting green dot-like desmin structures on red vimentin filaments (arrowheads). Also in areas where both proteins are present, they clearly are in distinct structures. Images are taken from [11]
Fig. 9In vitro filament assembly of wild-type desmin compared to various mutants. Assembly was initiated at time point zero by increase of the ionic strength of the incubation buffer and stopped at 10 s and 10 min, respectively, by addition of filament buffer containing 0.2 % glutaraldehyde. The wild-type desmin (desmin WT) and the mutants, indicated within the respective panels, were analyzed after being negatively stained with uranyl acetate by transmission electron microscopy. Images are taken from [12, 13]