| Literature DB >> 32303261 |
Dominic Scaglioni1,2, Matthew Ellis3,4, Francesco Catapano1,2, Silvia Torelli1,2, Darren Chambers1,5, Lucy Feng5, Caroline Sewry5, Jennifer Morgan1,2, Francesco Muntoni1,2, Rahul Phadke6,7,8,9.
Abstract
The primary molecular endpoint for many Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) clinical trials is the induction, or increase in production, of dystrophin protein in striated muscle. For accurate endpoint analysis, it is essential to have reliable, robust and objective quantification methodologies capable of detecting subtle changes in dystrophin expression. In this work, we present further development and optimisation of an automated, digital, high-throughput script for quantitative analysis of multiplexed immunofluorescent (IF) whole slide images (WSI) of dystrophin, dystrophin associated proteins (DAPs) and regenerating myofibres (fetal/developmental myosin-positive) in transverse sections of DMD, Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) and control skeletal muscle biopsies. The script enables extensive automated assessment of myofibre morphometrics, protein quantification by fluorescence intensity and sarcolemmal circumference coverage, colocalisation data for dystrophin and DAPs and regeneration at the single myofibre and whole section level. Analysis revealed significant variation in dystrophin intensity, percentage coverage and amounts of DAPs between differing DMD and BMD samples. Accurate identification of dystrophin via a novel background subtraction method allowed differential assessment of DAP fluorescence intensity within dystrophin positive compared to dystrophin negative sarcolemma regions. This enabled surrogate quantification of molecular functionality of dystrophin in the assembly of the DAP complex. Overall, the digital script is capable of multiparametric and unbiased analysis of markers of myofibre regeneration and dystrophin in relation to key DAPs and enabled better characterisation of the heterogeneity in dystrophin expression patterns seen in BMD and DMD alongside the surrogate assessment of molecular functionality of dystrophin. Both these aspects will be of significant relevance to ongoing and future DMD and other muscular dystrophies clinical trials to help benchmark therapeutic efficacy.Entities:
Keywords: Digital pathology; Dystrophin; Genetic therapies; Immunofluorescence; Muscular dystrophy; Quantification
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32303261 PMCID: PMC7165405 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-020-00918-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Antibodies
All antibodies used with information on species, isotype, class, catalogue number and working dilution. Figure shows antibody combinations used for (a) α-sarcoglycan (b) β-dystroglycan and (c) f/d myosin triple stains
Fig. 1Serial sections from CTRL_1 were immunostained for dystrophin (a-b), a-sarcoglycan (c-d) and B-dystroglycan (e-f) separately on different occasions over a 5-week period. Each slide was immunostained according to the same protocol and acquired at the AxioScan with the same exposure times and configurations. Images were processed with the script to assess natural variability in immunostaining, acquisition and analysis. Fluorescence intensity and % positive myofibres were calculated for all images. Serial sections from CTRL_1 were also stained for f/d myosin to determine if false positive myofibres were being incorrectly identified during the analysis (g)
Sample demographics
| Sample | Age at Biopsy | Mutation | Diagnosis | Age at onset of symptoms (years) | Motor and cognitive function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CTRL_1 | 9y6m | ||||
| CTRL_2 | 14y0m | ||||
| CTRL_3 | 7y10m | ||||
| BMD_1 | 7y7m | Mutation in intron 14 (C.1705-18 T > G) resulting in abberant splicing of exon 15 (predicted in frame) | BMD CK 1700 | Age 8 with tiredness on running | Autistic spectrum disorder Aged 15 can walk for 30 min, but more slowly compare to his peers. He continues hower to remain ver active, for example at school plays football, badminton and basketball |
| BMD_2 | 3y2m | Deletion exons 45–47 | BMD | Walks with a waddle. Can just about run but is unable to hop. Gets up with a modified Gower’s manoeuvre. | |
| BMD_3 | 9y0m | Deletion exons 3–7 | BMD CK 4117 | Age 9 with a history of muscle weakness | Problems running and difficulty getting up off the floor. Unable to hop and has difficulty climbing stairs. |
| DMD_1 | 4y8m | Duplication of exons 5–7 | DMD, diagnosed at 2.5 for incidental finding of high CK (28,000) | 3.5 years | Steroids declined. Lost of ambulation age 8 years 10 months |
| DMD_2 | 6y10m | Deletion of exons 6–44 (predicted in-frame) | DMD CK 25500 | 4 years, with peak of activity aged 6 and deterioration from age 7 | Lost ambulation aged 10; special education needs. On steroids |
| DMD_3 | 3y3m | Hemizygous mutation, c.4517_4518delTG (p.Val1506fs) in exon 32 | DMD CK 15189 | 3 years | Behaviorual difficulties. Age 10 walks slowly for up to 30 min. |
Demographics for all control and patient samples used in this study
Fig. 2a Mean sarcolemmal dystrophin intensity based on sarcolemmal fluorescence analysis of dystrophin immunostaining. b % myofibres positive for dystrophin immunostaining. A positive fibre is classified as having > 25% sarcolemmal circumference coverage for dystrophin immunostaining. c Cumulative frequency graph for sarcolemmal dystrophin fluorescence intensity and d cumulative frequency graph for % of positive sarcolemmal dystrophin circumference coverage in all samples. All samples were immunostained and acquired at the same time under the same conditions. N = 2 serial sections for each sample
Fig. 3a Myofibre classification key for coverage of sarcolemmal protein markers (Dystrophin, α-sarcoglycan or β-dystroglycan). Sarcolemmal circumference coverage is used to place fibres in 4 categories. Protein negative (< 25% coverage) or varying degrees of protein positive (25–50%, 50–75% or 75–100% sarcolemmal circumference coverage). b Image panel highlighting dystrophin immunofluorescence staining (green 488) of CTRL_1, BMD_3 and DMD_3 and their corresponding dystrophin classification maps. Yellow regions show connective tissue or myofibres have not been recognised/detected during the fibre recognition phase
Fig. 4Mean fluorescence intensity of sarcolemmal α-sarcoglycan (a) and β-dystroglycan (d). Cumulative fluorescence intensity for α-sarcoglycan (b) and β-dystroglycan (e). Average % myofibres positive for α-sarcoglycan (c) and β-dystroglycan (f). A positive fibre is classified as having > 25% sarcolemmal protein circumference coverage. β-dystroglycan (g) and α-sarcoglycan (h) intensity in regions of sarcolemmas that were classified as either positive or negative for dystrophin. All samples were immunostained and acquired at the same time under the same conditions. N = 2 serial sections for each sample
Fig. 5a Percentage of fibres in each sample that were classified positive for the presence of fetal and developmental myosin. All samples were immunostained and acquired at the same time under the same conditions. N = 2 serial sections for each sample. b Image panel highlighting f/d myosin (pink 647) and lamininα2 staining (red 568) of CTRL_1, BMD_3 and DMD_3 and their corresponding f/d myosin classification maps generated via digital analysis. Blue fibres in the classification map are negative for f/d myosin whilst red fibres have been classified as positive