| Literature DB >> 33255644 |
Mónika Sztretye1, László Szabó1, Nóra Dobrosi1, János Fodor1, Péter Szentesi1, János Almássy1, Zsuzsanna É Magyar1, Beatrix Dienes1, László Csernoch1.
Abstract
Muscular dystrophies are a group of more than 160 different human neuromuscular disorders characterized by a progressive deterioration of muscle mass and strength. The causes, symptoms, age of onset, severity, and progression vary depending on the exact time point of diagnosis and the entity. Congenital myopathies are rare muscle diseases mostly present at birth that result from genetic defects. There are no known cures for congenital myopathies; however, recent advances in gene therapy are promising tools in providing treatment. This review gives an overview of the mouse models used to investigate the most common muscular dystrophies and congenital myopathies with emphasis on their potentials and limitations in respect to human applications.Entities:
Keywords: dystrophinopathies; dystrophy; malignant hyperthermia; mouse models; muscle disorders; myopathy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33255644 PMCID: PMC7728138 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21238935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Mutations in skeletal muscle causing muscle disorders. ➀. Altered lipid phosphatase activity of MTM1; ➁. defects in microtubule dynamics or vesicular traffic (DNM2); ➂. defective calcium release from the SR via RyRs; ➃. mutated or missing dystrophin; ➄. defects in alternative splicing due to MBLN1, CELF1 and DUX4 malfunction. (MTM1: myotubularin 1; DNM2: dynamin 2; SR: sarcoplasmic reticulum; RyR: ryanodine receptor; MBLN1: muscle blind-like; CELF: CUGBP/Elav-like factors; DUX4: homebox protein 4; DHPR: dihydropyridine receptor; NMJ: neuromuscular junction; SERCA: sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum calcium pump).
Mouse models of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation(s) | Genetic Similarity/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
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| mdx | Exon 23 point mutation. | On the C57BL/10 background. | The diaphragm shows progressive deterioration as in humans. | Minimal clinical symptoms, lifespan reduced by only 25% compared to human DMD. | [ | |
| mdx2cv | Intron 42 point mutation. | On the C57BL/6 background. | Chemically induced mutation. | Fewer revertant fibers. | [ | |
| CRKHR1 | Unsequenced, dystrophin deficiency confirmed by immunofluorescence staining. | On the C3H background. | ENU chemically induced mutation. | Elevated CK, centrally nucleated myofibers, and dystrophin deficiency. | [ | |
| mdx52 | Exon 52 deletion. | On the C57BL/6 background | Targeted inactivation. | [ | ||
| mdxβgeo | Insertion of the β-geo gene trap cassette in intron 63. | LacZ replaced the CR and CT domain. | All dystrophin isoforms are mutated. | [ | ||
| DMD-null | Entire DMD gene deletion. | Cre-loxP system. | All dystrophin isoforms are eliminated. | [ | ||
| Dp71-null | Insertion of the β-geo cassette in intron 62. | Selective elimination of Dp71. | Dp71 deficiency is associated with early cataract formation in mice. | [ | ||
| Dup2 | Exon 52 duplication. | On the C57BL/6 background. | [ | |||
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| NSG-mdx4cv | Prkdc and IL2rb double deficient. | On the mdx4cv background. | Innate immunity deficient. | B, T, and NK cell deficient. | [ | |
| Rag2 IL2rb Dmd | Rag2 and IL2rb double deficient. | On the mdx βgeo background. | B, T, and NK cell deficient. | [ | ||
| Scid mdx | Prkdc deficient. | On the mdx background. | B and T cell deficient. | [ | ||
| W41 mdx | C-kit receptor deficient | On the mdx background | Haematopoietic deficient. | Optimal for bone marrow cell therapy studies. | [ | |
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| α7/dystrophin dko or mdx/α7–/– | α7/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| Adbn–/– mdx | αdystrobrevin/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| Cmah-mdx | Cmah/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| d-dko | δ-sarcoglycan/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| Desmin-/- mdx4cv | desmin/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| Dmdmdx/Largemyd | like-glycosyltransferase/dystrophin deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| DMD null; Adam8-/- | ADAM8 deficient and entire DMD gene deletion. | On the DMD-null background. | The injured myofibers are not efficiently removed in DMD null. | [ | ||
| dysferlin/dystrophin dko | dysferlin/dystrophin double deficient. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | |||
| Il-10-/-/mdx | interleukin-10/dystrophin double deficient. | On the mdx background. | Severe dystrophic phenotype and marked cardiomyopathy. | [ | ||
| mdx/mTR | telomerase RNA/dystrophin double deficient. | Premature depletion of myofiber repair. | Severe dystrophic phenotype. | [ | ||
| mdx:MyoD-/- | MyoD/dystrophin double deficient. | MyoD is only expressed in skeletal muscle. | Severe dystrophic phenotype and prominent dilated cardiomyopathy. | MyoD mutations do not occur in human DMD. | [ | |
| mdx:utrophin-/- | utrophin/dystrophin double deficient. | Targeted mutation at the utrophin CR domain/exon 7. | Severe dystrophic phenotype with cardiomyopathy, cardiac fibrosis, LV dilation. | [ | ||
| PAI-1-/--mdx | plasminogen activator inhibitor-1/dystrophin double deficient. | Early onset fibrosis and higher CK. | [ | |||
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| full-length dystrophin TG mdx | transgenic over-expression of full-length dystrophin. | On the mdx background. | Over-expression does not harm muscle rather it shows protection. | [ | ||
| Dp71 TG mdx | transgenic over-expression of Dp71. | On the mdx background. | Severe disease signs. | [ | ||
| Dp116 TG mdx4cv | transgenic over-expression of Dp116. | On the mdx4cv background | Severe disease signs. | No change in histopathology, CK, and specific force development. | [ | |
| Dp260 TG mdx | transgenic over-expression of Dp260. | On the mdx background | Slightly improved histopathology. | No improvement of specific force. | [ | |
| micro-dystrophin TG | transgenic over-expression of synthetic micro-dystrophin gene. | On the mdx background. | Improved protection against disease signs. | No restoration of nNOS. | [ | |
| Fiona | transgenic over-expression of full-length dystrophin gene. | On the mdx background. | Improved protection against disease signs. | No restoration of nNOS. | [ | |
| laminin α1 TG mdx | transgenic over-expression of laminin α1. | On the mdx background. | Similar phenotype as mdx. | No improvement but no harm. | [ | |
Mouse models of myotonic dystrophies.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation(s) | Genetic Similarities/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
| DMPK KO | Reduced DMPK transcripts levels by inactivation of the DMPK gene. | Can be used to study relief pathways in DM pathogenesis. | Increased possibility of cataracts, male infertility, and cardiac dysfunction. | [ | ||
| Tg26 | Overexpression of normal DMPK gene with short, non-pathogenic CTG repeats. | Can be used to study the effect of normal DMPK in high expression levels. | The pathogenesis is vastly different from conventional DM. | Severe cardiomyopathy symptoms, skeletal muscle wasting, and smooth muscle weakening. | Lack of non-muscle-like symptoms. | [ |
| HSALR | High levels of skeletal muscle expression of untranslated CUG repeats (≈250) in an unrelated mRNA. | The effect of CUG repeats in RNA and nuclear foci can be studied. | Interaction with transcription factors may be different from conventional DM. | High lethality in early developmental stages, myotonic discharges in young animals, myopaty in later stages. | Lack of muscle wasting and other neurological effects; the NMJ cannot be studied in depth. | [ |
| DMSXL | Expanded DMPK transcript expression with different repeat sizes in various mouse tissues driven by | Accumulation of ribonuclear foci and abnormal splicing patterns in multiple tissues in homozygous DM300. | Possible dose-dependent RNA toxicity. Time-consuming and costly mouse breeding. The correlation of copy number and phenotype is hard to quantify. | Skeletal muscle, cardiac and CNS symptoms such as myotonia, progressive muscle weakness, age-dependent glucose intolerance. | Relatively lower expression levels of the CUG-containing transcripts compared to other mouse model systems that lead to milder symptoms. | [ |
| EpA960 | Cre-loxP system induced tissue-specific expression of DMPK exon 15 with large iterrupted CTG repeats. | Transcripts foci accumulation, MBNL1 sequestration, CELF1 upregulation, and the return of embryonic splicing patterns. | Due to tissue specificity, the complex multisystem symptoms of DM are hard to model but with leaky EpA960 transgene expression is manageable. | In cardiac tissue severe histopathological, functional and electrophysiological changes. | Due to tissue specificity, the complex multisystem symptoms of DM are hard to model. | [ |
| GFP-DMPK-(CTG)X | Expression of the DMPK 3′UTR with different repeat sizes. | The extent of RNA toxicity shows CUG-triplet repeat dose effect on myogenesis in overexpressing model of DMPK 3′UTR, which can be compared in distinct repeat expansions. | The expression rate and the length of CUG repeat can affect the pathomechanism of DM differently. | In higher repeat numbers, the DM phenotype was present, and increased CUG expansion amplified the symptoms. | With small repeat numbers, the model failed to produce skeletal muscle atrophy, due to premature death caused by severe cardiac damage. | [ |
| Mouse line to model abnormal splicing regulators connecting DM | Modeling MBNL sequestration by KO or propagating alternate splicing patterns by overexpressing CELF. | Simulation of downstream changes of DM by knocking out MBNL or overexpressing CELF. | The interactions of the protein family MBNL show a combinatorial loss-of-function nature and with the different expression levels of CELF, the system may show high variability. | Typical DM symptoms in various tissues: cataracts, motivation deficits and apathy, cardiac conduction defects. | Muscle weakness or muscle waisting was not detected. Histological, functional, and molecular changes were based on the rate of CELF upregulation. | [ |
| DSMD-Q KO | Loss of function variants (frameshift, insertion, or deletion) induced by CRISPR-Cas9 to Dmpk, Six5, Mbnl1 and Dmwd genes. | Combines the three approaches of DM1: the haploinsufficiency model, the RNA toxicity model, and the chromatin structure malformation model. | Off-target problems of the CRISPR-Cas9 method dismissed by whole genom sequencing. | Conventional DM1 symptom: skeletal muscle wasting and weakness with correlating histopathology; heart problems; endocrine disorders; pathological changes in the digestive tract and neurological impairment caused by satellite cell malfunction. | Can simulate the characteristics of DM1 but not suitable for DM2. | [ |
| Mouse lines to model downstream components of DM: | Alternative splicing variants of ion channels and/or receptors lead to the expression of embryonic form of channels and/or mutated receptors through development. | The effect of ion channels and/or metabolic pathway receptor misplicing can be studied separately from other genetical changes. | The genetic background vastly different from the conventional DM model lines such as RNA toxicity or haploinsufficieny approaches. | Can be used to distinguish the role of downstream components of DM pathomechanism. | CaV1.1 mainly affects intracellular calcium homeostatis such as mitochondria but not linked closely to other aspects of DM. | [ |
Mouse models of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation(s) | Genetic Similarities/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
| AAV6-DUX4 | TA injection of AAV6-DUX4 in 6–8-week-old mice. | On the C57BL/6 background. | Degenerating myofibers and infiltrating mononuclear cells. | Minor degeneration, increased central nuclei. | [ | |
| D4Z4-2.5 | Transgenic insertion of two and a half copies of D4Z4 from the permissive haplotype of a pathogenic allele. | On the C57BL/6NJ background. | Keratitis leading to blindness. | No muscle weakness or abnormal morphology. | Satellite-cell derived myoblasts with DUX4 positive nuclei fail to fuse and form myotubes. | [ |
| iDUX-2.7 | Doxycycline-inducible DUX4 transgene on the X-chromosome. | On C57BL/6J background. | Abnormal embryogenesis, mostly lethal. Surviving males lived ‹ 2 months. | Weaker grip strength. | Impaired myogenic regeneration. The activation of the downstream targets of DUX4 in mice differs from that in humans. Smaller and fewer myofibers, but not dystrophic. | [ |
| Xenograft | Human muscle engraftment into immunodeficient mice. | “Humanized” mouse model. | FSHD biomarker profile maintained in xenograft. | [ | ||
| FRG1 | Transgenic insertion of FRG1 driven by a human skeletal α-actin promoter. | Spinal curvature correlated with the level of FRG1 expression. | Fiber size variability, necrosis, centralized nuclei. Excess collagen, selective muscle atrophy, reduced exercise tolerance. | Abberant alternative splicing of specific pre-mRNAs. | [ | |
| Fat1 | Knockout of Fat1. | Regionalized muscle and non-muscle abnormalities. | Retinal vasculopathy, abnormal inner ear patterning. | Muscle weakness of the face and scapulohumeral region. | Altered myoblast migration polarity. | [ |
| Pitx1 | Transgenic overexpression of Pitx1 induced in the absence of doxycycline. | Myofiber atrophy, necrotic and centrally nucleated fibers, inflamatory infiltration. | Polyadenylated DUX4 mRNA expressed at higher level in FSHD muscle. | Asymmetric muscle weakness in the face and shoulders that gradually progresses into the trunk and leg muscles. | Retinal vasculopathy hearing loss. | [ |
| TIC-DUX4 | Tamoxifen inducible Cre-DUX4 | Reproductively viable. | No functional deficit of diaphragm muscles. Progressive pathology. | AAV-mediated follistatin gene therapy improved muscle mass and strength. No extramuscular deficits. | Tamoxifen dose-dependent skeletal muscle pathology. | [ |
Mouse models for multi-minicore disease and central core disease.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation | Genetic Similarity/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
| Homozygous RyR1-/- mice | From RyR1skrrm1 (RyR1-knockout) and RyR1tmAlle (foot domain is missing) strains. | RyR1-associated core disease is caused by autosomal-dominant mutations or biallelic recessive RyR1 loss. | The mice die perinatal as a result of respiratory failure due to a lack of ECC, severely reduced muscle mass, skeletal abnormalities. | [ | ||
| Heterozygous recessive RyR1 mice | Frameshift RyR1 p.Q1970fsX16 mutation in exon 36 plus the missense mutation RyR1 p.A4329D in exon 91. | Isogenic with those identified in severely affected MmD patients. | The bi-allelic RyR1 p.A4329D mutation causes a milder phenotype than its monoallelic expression. | [ | ||
| Selenon1-/- | Sepn1 <tm1.2Mred>/Orl. | SEPN1 KO mice are protected from the effects of SEPN1 loss. | Unclear why they do not show muscle phenotype. | Dysfunctional ER-stress response and inhibited SERCA2 activity; depleted mitochondria, minicores. | [ | |
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| RyR1-related congenital myopathy. | Missense substitution | Genetically and phenotypically valid model of a RyR1-related congenital myopathy. | Similar pathogenic phenotypes can arise from functionally different RyR1 mutations. | Progressive congenital myopathy related to muscle weakness with age. Mice also develop cores, minicores, and rods. | Phenotypic variability in RyR1 functionality. | [ |
Mouse models for centronuclear myopathies.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation | Genetic Similarity/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
| MTM1δ4 (MTM1−/y) MTM1-deficient | Absence of exon 4 in MTM1. | Total loss of myotubularin. | Female mice are also affected. | Very short lifespan, accumulation of central nuclei in skeletal muscle fibers, progressive and generalized myopathy starting at around 1 month of age. | Humans have different clinical evolution of the disease. XLMTM patients show severe myopathy at birth, which appears to be non-progressive. | [ |
| MTM1 p.R69C | c.205C>T base change in MTM1 exon 4. | Exon 4 skipping in the mouse similar to human MTM, as in quadriceps from a patient with the c.205C>T mutation. | There are some other human mutations: c.C208T (p.L70F), c.C205A (p.R69S), c.T202G (p.Y68D). | Longer lifespan than MTM1 KO mice and milder MTM phenotype with significant muscle weakness and atrophy. | Some residual myotubularin activity remains in MTM1 p.R69C mice. | [ |
| MTM1–/y DNM2+/– | MTM1–/y mouse that is heterozygous for DNM2. | 50% reduction of DNM2. | Longer lifespan than MTM1–/y mice. | [ | ||
| MTM1Δ5/y, MTM1Δ7/y | 5-bp (MTM1Δ5/y) and 7-bp (MTM1Δ7/y) deletion within the MTM1 gene with CRISPR-Cas9 technology. | Similar genotype as MTM1−/y with upregulation of miR-199a-1. | [ | |||
| KI-DNM2R465W (DNM2RW/+) | Point mutation A>T in exon 11. | Failed to reproduce the autosomal-dominant form of human CNM. | Neurotransmission is maintained and the mutation shows spatial and temporal muscle involvement as in the similar human mutations. | Homozygous mice show neonatal lethality. The level of central nuclei in muscle fibers is much lower (10%) in homozygous mice than seen in patients (up to 90%). | [ | |
| miR-133a dKO | Double mutation, | Upregulation of dynamin 2. Slowly developing CNM. | CNM only in type II fibers of mice, in contrast to the type I fiber predominance in human DNM2 patients. | [ | ||
| DNM2+/– | Target exon 8, heterozygous. | DNM2–/– mice are embryonically lethal. | Homozygous mice are embryonically lethal. | DNM2+/– mouse is physiologically and clinically similar to WT mouse. Differences in muscle function were not detectable. | [ | |
| BIN1–/– DNM2+/– | BIN1 KO mouse that is heterozygous for DNM2. Floxed exon 20. | Similar mutations were found in CNM patients. | Similar to WT. | [ | ||
| DNM2SL/+ | Mouse harboring the S619L DNM2 mutation. | Mimics the S619L missense human mutation. | An early and severe motor defect linked to force reduction and mitochondria structural anomalies | Centralization of nuclei is less prominent in adult mice. | [ | |
Mouse models for malignant hyperthermia.
| Model System | Genetic Changes in the Mouse Model/Mutation | Genetic Similarity/Genetic Background | Likeliness of Phenotype and Symptoms | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage | |||
| Y524S RyR1 knock-in mice | Missense mutation in the RyR1 gene. | Exact genetical similarity to a human mutation. | Homozygous mice die at the early stage of intrauterine life (17th day) or soon after birth. | 100% similar to the human phenotype. | none | [ |
| R163C RyR1 knock-in mice | Missense mutation in the RyR1 gene. | Exact genetical similarity to a human mutation. | Homozygous mice are not viable at birth. | 100% similar to the human phenotype. | none | [ |
| G2435R RyR1 knock-in mice | Missense mutation in the RyR1 gene. | Exact genetical similarity to a human mutation. | Some homozygous males died spontaneously. | 100% similar to the human phenotype. | none | [ |
| T4826I RyR1 knock-in mice | Missense mutation in the RyR1 gene. | Exact genetical similarity to a human mutation. | None. | 100% similar to the human phenotype. | none | [ |