| Literature DB >> 32012908 |
Camille Desgrouas1,2, Alice-Anaïs Varlet1, Anne Dutour3,4, Damien Galant1, Françoise Merono1, Nathalie Bonello-Palot1,5, Patrice Bourgeois1,5, Adèle Lasbleiz3,4, Cathy Petitjean4, Patricia Ancel3, Nicolas Levy1,5, Catherine Badens1,2,5, Bénédicte Gaborit3,4.
Abstract
This study details the clinical and cellular phenotypes associated with two missense heterozygous mutations in LMNA, c.1745G > T p.(Arg582Leu), and c.1892G> A p.(Gly631Asp), in two patients with early onset of diabetes mellitus, hypertriglyceridemia and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. In these two patients, subcutaneous adipose tissue was persistent, at least on the abdomen, and the serum leptin level remained in the normal range. Cellular studies showed elevated nuclear anomalies, an accelerated senescence rate and a decrease of replication capacity in patient cells. In cellular models, the overexpression of mutated prelamin A phenocopied misshapen nuclei, while the partial reduction of lamin A expression in patient cells significantly improved nuclear morphology. Altogether, these results suggest a link between lamin A mutant expression and senescence associated phenotypes. Transcriptome analysis of the whole subcutaneous adipose tissue from the two patients and three controls, paired for age and sex using RNA sequencing, showed the up regulation of genes implicated in immunity and the down regulation of genes involved in development and cell differentiation in patient adipose tissue. Therefore, our results suggest that some mutations in LMNA are associated with severe metabolic phenotypes without subcutaneous lipoatrophy, and are associated with nuclear misshaping.Entities:
Keywords: dyslipidemia; insulin resistance; lamin A/C; metabolic syndrome; nuclear anomalies and premature senescence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32012908 PMCID: PMC7072715 DOI: 10.3390/cells9020310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Patient 1 clinical description. (A) Pedigree of patient 1 family, (B) Photographs of patient 1 showing central/android shape obesity with fat accumulation in the facial and supraclavicular regions, and cushingoid morphotype. (C) Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) showing body fat distribution. (D) Percentage of fat mass compared to the reference curve and abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan confirming the presence of a small amount of subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) (superficial and deep), and an excessive accumulation of visceral adipose tissue (VAT). (E) Needle fat biopsy showing the same adipocytes diameter as a type 2 diabetic population matched for age, sex, and body mass index (BMI) and higher adipocytes diameter than obese non diabetic (ND) population matched for age, sex and BMI.
Figure 2Patient 2 clinical description (A) Pedigree of patient 2 family. (B) Photographs of patient 2 showing no lower limb lipoatrophy but a high waist circumference. (C) DEXA showing body fat distribution and the moderate excess of fat mass (31.1%) compared to the reference curve. (D) Needle fat biopsy showing smaller adipocytes than a matched for age sex and BMI obese non-diabetic (ND) and a type 2 diabetic population. (E) Abdominal CT scan confirming the presence of an excess of deep subcutaneous fat.
Figure 3Nuclear shape anomalies and senescence studies. (A) Percent of nuclear shape anomalies counted by immunofluorescence in control (in black), and patient (in grey) cells (left panel), and representative pictures of control and patient cells after staining with DAPI and anti-lamin A fluorescent antibody (right panel). (B) Percent of nuclear shape anomalies after transfection in control and patient fibroblasts with a siRNA targeting 3′UTR of LMNA (upper panel); representative pictures of patient cells showing improved nuclear shape after siRNA transfection (lower panel); * represents low staining in nuclei with normal shape. (C) Percent of nuclear shape anomalies after transfection of control fibroblasts with plasmids expressing either wild type prelamin A (in black) or mutants prelamin A (in grey) tagged with GFP at the N-terminal end (left panel) and representative pictures of each conditions (right panel). (D) BrdU incorporation of control and patient cells. (E) Senescence associated to beta-galactosidase production. In these experiments, controls correspond to fibroblasts from healthy donors. White arrows on the pictures show cytoplasmic staining and scale bars 5 μm. The number of independent experiments was between three and seven. Asterisks correspond to significant p-values: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, **** p < 0.0001.
Figure 4RNAseq on whole adipose tissue biopsies. (A) Heat-map and top-20 of deregulated genes in the two patients with LMNA mutations compared to three controls paired for age and sex. (B) GO analysis showing the main pathways deregulated in patients with lamin A mutation. (C) Validation by RT-qPCR of three regulated genes in controls and patients (TREM2, SLPI, FOS) in adipose tissue, * p < 0.05 vs. controls; ** p < 0.01 vs. controls. (D) RT-qPCR of SLPI and FOS in fibroblasts. TREM2 was not expressed in fibroblasts.