| Literature DB >> 25566070 |
Heinz Jungbluth1, Mathias Gautel2.
Abstract
Centronuclear myopathies (CNMs) are a genetically heterogeneous group of inherited neuromuscular disorders characterized by clinical features of a congenital myopathy and abundant central nuclei as the most prominent histopathological feature. The most common forms of congenital myopathies with central nuclei have been attributed to X-linked recessive mutations in the MTM1 gene encoding myotubularin ("X-linked myotubular myopathy"), autosomal-dominant mutations in the DNM2 gene encoding dynamin-2 and the BIN1 gene encoding amphiphysin-2 (also named bridging integrator-1, BIN1, or SH3P9), and autosomal-recessive mutations in BIN1, the RYR1 gene encoding the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor, and the TTN gene encoding titin. Models to study and rescue the affected cellular pathways are now available in yeast, C. elegans, drosophila, zebrafish, mouse, and dog. Defects in membrane trafficking have emerged as a key pathogenic mechanisms, with aberrant T-tubule formation, abnormalities of triadic assembly, and disturbance of the excitation-contraction machinery the main downstream effects studied to date. Abnormal autophagy has recently been recognized as another important collateral of defective membrane trafficking in different genetic forms of CNM, suggesting an intriguing link to primary disorders of defective autophagy with overlapping histopathological features. The following review will provide an overview of clinical, histopathological, and genetic aspects of the CNMs in the context of the key pathogenic mechanism, outline unresolved questions, and indicate promising future lines of enquiry.Entities:
Keywords: BIN1 bridging integrator-1/amphiphysin-2 gene; DNM2 dynamin-2 gene; MTM1 myotubularin gene; RYR1 ryanodine receptor-1 gene; TTN titin gene; autophagy; centronuclear myopathy; myotubular myopathy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25566070 PMCID: PMC4271577 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2014.00339
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Genes and proteins implicated in various forms of centronuclear myopathy (CNM).
| Gene | Inheritance | Protein | Principal function(s) | Main pathogenic effects in muscle |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| XL | Myotubularin | PI3P regulation Membrane formation/trafficking Endocytosis Endo(lyso)some formation | Abnormal nuclear positioning Abnormalities of triad positioning and function Abnormal autophagy Abnormal cytoskeletal architecture Abnormal mitochondrial positioning Autophagosome formation | |
| AD | Dynamin-2 | Membrane formation/trafficking Vesicle formation and fission | Abnormal nuclear positioning Abnormalities of triad positioning and function Abnormal autophagy Abnormal cytoskeletal architecture Abnormal mitochondrial positioning | |
| AR, AD | Amphiphysin-2 | Membrane remodeling | Abnormalities of nuclear positioning, triad assembly and function | |
| AR | Skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor | Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium release | Abnormal nuclear positioning Abnormalities of triad assembly and function Abnormal SR calcium release | |
| AR | Titin | Elastic link between actin and myosin filaments Organizer of Z-disk and M-band assembly Organizer of myosin filament, possibly by regulating myosin motor domains Mechanosensor Signaling scaffold organizing ubiquitin–proteasome and autophagy–lysosomal protein turnover | Abnormal sarcomere assembly and turnover Disrupted force transmission Abnormal myosin force generation Abnormal transcriptional regulation | |
| AR? Digenic? | hJUMPY | PI3P regulation Membrane formation/trafficking | Abnormal nuclear positioning Abnormal excitation–contraction coupling Abnormal autophagy | |
| AD | Coiled-coil domain- containing protein 78 | Centriole biogenesis? | Abnormal nuclear positioning Core formation? |
Figure 1Tentative links between membrane signaling, sarcomere activity, and nuclear positioning. T-tubules (T) link the sarcolemma to the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) at the triads by contacts between dihydropyridine receptors (small orange oval) and ryanodine receptors (small green oval). Phosphoinositol phosphates (PIP; blue hexagonal symbols at SR membrane) are turned over by the lipid phosphatase myotubularin, regulating membrane dynamics, and PIP-dependent downstream signaling. This affects multiple pathways, including autophagy. Altered membrane remodeling and microtubular transport will converge on these pathways. Defects affecting Titin’s scaffolding role concerning multiple components of the protein quality control machinery impinge on contractile function, sarcomere turnover and possibly sarcomere-nuclear links. Nuclei and sarcomeres are joined by peripheral cytoskeletal networks, including desmin intermediate filaments and nesprin via “transmembrane actin-associated nuclear links” (Luxton et al., 2011). 1, Mutations affecting lipid phosphatase activity of myotubularin (MTM1 and MTMR14); 2, mutations in components of the membrane remodeling machinery (BIN1); 3, defects in vesicular traffic or microtubule dynamics (DNM2); 4, mutations in the endosomal–autophagosomal–lysosomal pathway (EPG5); 5, defective calcium homeostasis and excitation–contraction coupling (RYR1); 6, defective sarcomeric maintenance and protein quality control (TTN); 7, disrupted nuclear cytoskeleton links, abnormal nuclear positioning and possibly impaired triad function via impaired microtubule/centriole function (CCDC78).