| Literature DB >> 35818510 |
Taylor I Schultz1, Frank J Raucci1,2, Fadi N Salloum1,3.
Abstract
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a devastating disease affecting approximately 1 in every 3,500 male births worldwide. Multiple mutations in the dystrophin gene have been implicated as underlying causes of DMD. However, there remains no cure for patients with DMD, and cardiomyopathy has become the most common cause of death in the affected population. Extensive research is under way investigating molecular mechanisms that highlight potential therapeutic targets for the development of pharmacotherapy for DMD cardiomyopathy. In this paper, the authors perform a literature review reporting on recent ongoing efforts to identify novel therapeutic strategies to reduce, prevent, or reverse progression of cardiac dysfunction in DMD.Entities:
Keywords: ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; ARB, angiotensin receptor blocker; ApN, adiponectin; BB, beta-blocker; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; CMR, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging; Cx, connexin; DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; DPC, dystrophin-associated protein complex; Duchenne muscular dystrophy; FFA, free fatty acid; HF, heart failure; LNP, lipid nanoparticle; LV, left ventricular; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; NIV, noninvasive ventilation; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; PKA, protein kinase A; PTX3, pentraxin 3; Px, pannexin; RNP, ribonucleoprotein complexes; RT-qPCR, reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RyR2, ryanodine receptor isoform 2; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum; TRPV2, transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily V, member 2; TrkB, tyrosine kinase B; arrhythmias; cardiomyopathy; inflammatory modulators; miR, microRNA; myocardial fibrosis; sgRNA, single guide RNA
Year: 2022 PMID: 35818510 PMCID: PMC9270569 DOI: 10.1016/j.jacbts.2021.11.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JACC Basic Transl Sci ISSN: 2452-302X
Figure 1Dystrophin Acts as a Molecular Scaffold and Influences Mechanisms of Calcium Handling in Cardiomyocytes
(A) Dystrophin present: Cytosolic Ca2+ is regulated primarily by LTCC, SACs, and NCX. In normal excitation–contraction (E-C) coupling, small influx of Ca2+ through LTCCs stimulates Ca2+ release from the SR through RYR2. Ca2+ activates nNOS within the dystrophin complex in a calmodulin-dependent manner. NO subsequently further activates SR Ca2+ turnover through s-nitrosylation of RYR2, IP3, and SERCA2. NO also augments E-C coupling through production of cGMP, which also reduces cardiac afterload by stimulating vasodilation. Normal physiological stretch activates NOX-2–dependent ROS production, which increases Ca2+ influx through SACs. Phospholamban (PLN) negatively regulates SERCA2 and β-adrenergic activation leads to PLN phosphorylation and dissociation from SERCA2, with a resultant increase in SR Ca2+ reuptake. Dystrophin helps to stabilize the sarcolemmal membrane during repeated stretch–relaxation cycling. (B) Dystrophin absent: Sarcolemmal influx of Ca2+ increases through disruption of the normal function of LTCCs, NCX, SACs, and microtears in the membrane. Mislocalization of nNOS disrupts NO signaling, which reduces s-nitrosylation of the SR channels and contributes to SR Ca2+ leak. Increased cytosolic Ca2+ also actives CAMKII, PKC, and the purinergic signaling cascade, leading to further increase in intracellular Ca2+. Lower NO levels also reduce mitochondrial ATP production leading to increased ROS generation. Increased intracellular ROS, combined with mitochondrial energetics dysregulation and the high intracellular Ca2+, induce inflammatory, apoptotic, and necrotic pathway activation. The CamKII = calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; cyt c = cytochrome c; IP3 = inositol triphosphate receptor; LTCC = L-type calcium channel; MCU = mitochondrial Ca2+ uniporter; mNCX = mitochondrial Na+-Ca2+ exchanger; NCX = Na+-Ca2+ exchanger; nNOS = neuronal nitric oxide synthase; NF-kB = nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; NOX-2 = NADPH oxidase 2; P2X7 = P2X7 purinergic receptor; PKC = protein kinase C; PLC = phospholipase C; PLN = phospholamban; Px = pannexin channels; ROS = reactive oxygen species; RYR2 = ryanodine receptor type 2; SAC = stretch-activated channels; SERCA2 = sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2; SR = sarcoplasmic reticulum; VGCC = voltage-gated Ca2+ channels.
Central IllustrationCardiomyopathy in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Potential Therapeutic Targets
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) has several systemic effects, including cardiomyopathy. DMD cardiomyopathy is characterized by cardiac fibrosis, arrhythmias, and heart failure. Inflammatory modulation and mitochondrial regulation could reduce cardiac fibrosis associated with DMD. In addition, gap junction regulation and therapy with antiarrhythmic agents could reduce incidence of arrhythmia in DMD. Furthermore, gene therapy and neurohormonal modulation could be beneficial in reducing heart failure in DMD. BDNF = brain-derived neurotrophic factor; Cas9 = CRISPR associated protein 9; CRISPR = clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats; DHA = docosahexaenoic acid; EPA = eicosapentaenoic acid; Lox = lysyl oxidase; NLRP3 = NOD-LRR-and pyrin domain-containing protein3; Nox4 = NADPH oxidase 4; Nrf2 = nuclear factor-erythroid factor 2-related factor; PARKIN = E3 ubiquitin ligase; PINK1 = PTEN-induced kinase; PTX3 = pentraxin 3; TrkB = tropomyosin receptor kinase B.
Current Experimental Investigations for DMD Cardiomyopathy
| Drug/Class | Target/Mechanism | Stage of Development | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exon skipping gene therapy | ||||
| Casimersen | DMD exon 45 | FDA approved under accelerated review | Specifically targets the causative defect, produces at least somewhat functional dystrophins | Require regular infusions, only available for specific mutations, cardiac benefits unclear |
| Eteplirsen | DMD exon 51 | FDA approved | ||
| Golodirsen | DMD exon 53 | FDA approved under accelerated review | ||
| Vitolarsen | DMD exon 53 | FDA approved | ||
| Nonsense mutation suppression | ||||
| Ataluren | Release factor inhibition | Approved in EU, orphan status with FDA | Specifically targets the causative defect, produces at least somewhat functional dystrophin | Only effective for patients with a relatively small subset of DMD mutation types (nonsense) |
| G418 sulfate | Binds 80s ribosome, increased near-cognate tRNA mispairing | Preclinical for DMD | ||
| Direct CRISP/Cas9 editing | Specific mutation correction | Preclinical for DMD | Potentially curative | May result in permanent side effects |
| KT5720 | Selective PKA inhibition | Preclinical for DMD | ||
| Tranilast | TRPV2 inhibition | Phase 1 and 2 clinical investigation | Side-effect profile known through its use as antiallergic medication | |
| Gap19 | Cx43 hemichannel-specific inhibition | Preclinical for DMD | ||
| Gap26 | Cx43 gap junction channel-specific inhibition | Preclinical for DMD | ||
| Probenecid | Px channel inhibition, TRPV2 agonist, inhibits renal tubular urate resorption | FDA approved for gout, Phase 2 investigation for HF | Well-established safety profile | Several potential mechanisms, may be less effective than more specific agents |
| Aldosterone inhibitors | Aldosterone inhibition, Px channel inhibition (?) | Phase 3 clinical investigation, spironolactone FDA approved for HF | Evidence of improvement in subclinical HF in DMD population | Mild diuretic effect, risk of hyperkalemia and gynecomastia |
| ACEI inhibitors | Inhibit Ang II formation and bradykinin metabolism | FDA approved for HF | Risk of angioedema and chronic cough, hypotension and hyperkalemia | |
| Angiotensin receptor blockers | Competitive inhibition of Ang II binding to the angiotensin 1 receptor | FDA approved for HF | Less angioedema and cough than ACE inhibitors | Potentially increased risk of hypotension and hyperkalemia compared to ACE inhibitors |
| β-blockers | Nonselective or selective inhibition of β adrenergic receptors | FDA approved for HF and arrhythmia | Risk of hypotension and bradycardia | |
| Sacubitril | Neprilysin inhibition | FDA approved for HF | May be superior to ACE inhibitors in reducing risk hospitalization and death in symptomatic HF | Incidence of hypotension and hyperkalemia may be more common than with ACE inhibitors |
| Eicosapentaenoic acid, docosahexaenoic acid | Inflammatory pathway inhibition | FDA approved for risk reduction in major cardiovascular events | Minimal side effect profile, may improve lipid profile in patients with concomitant dyslipidemia | |
| Zidovudine | Reverse transcriptase inhibition, P2X7 receptor antagonism | FDA approved for HIV, preclinical for DMD/HF | Reports of cardiomyopathy and myopathy (particularly at higher doses), class 2B carcinogenic risk | |
| Ivabradine | If inhibition | FDA approved for HF | Improves outcomes in symptomatic HF with reduced LVEF and persistent heart rate ≥70 beats/min, HR reduction with low risk of hypotension | Risk of bradycardia and/or atrial fibrillation |
| Sulforaphane | Nrf2-mediated TGF-β/Smad signaling, NLRP3 inhibition (?) | Preclinical for DMD, Phase 1 for other indications |
ACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme; DMD = Duchenne muscular dystrophy; EU = European Union; FDA = Food and Drug Administration; HF = heart failure; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction.
Cardiac and Noncardiac Phenotypes of Established DMD Mouse Models
| First Author, Year, Ref. # | Model | Mutation | Background Strain | Lifespan | Histopathologic Changes (Onset) | Cardiac Dysfunction (Onset) | Cardiac Phenotype Comments | Other Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dystrophin-deficient models | ||||||||
| Bulfield et al, 1984 | Mdx | Exon 23 point mutation | C57BL/10 | 2 y | Mild (≥10 mo) | Mild/none (≥10 mo) | Frequent ECG abnormalities, DCM in females and HCM in males | Most widely used model, available through Jackson Labs (C57BL/10ScSn-Dmdmdx/J, stock #001801) |
| Krivov et al, 2009 | Albino Mdx | Exon 23 point mutation | Albino | 2 y | Mild (≥10 mo) | Mild/none (≥10 mo) | Same as mdx | |
| Schmidt el al, 2011 | Mdx/BALB/c | Exon 23 point mutation | BALB/c | |||||
| Duan et al, unpublished data | Mdx/BL6 | Exon 23 point mutation | C57BL/6 | |||||
| Schmidt el al, 2011 | Mdx/C3H | Exon 23 point mutation | C3H | |||||
| Fukada et al, 2010 | Mdx/DBA2 | Exon 23 point mutation | DBA2 | 1.5-2 y | Severe (≥8 wk) | Mild/moderate (≥10 wk) | Frequent ECG abnormalities, normalization of fractional shortening reported at 1 year | More severe dystrophic phenotype (polymorphism in LTBP4 gene), increased fibrosis and fat accumulation, calcifications seen in both dystrophic and wild type strains, available through Jackson Labs (D2.B10-Dmdmdx/J, stock #013141) |
| Wasala et al, 2015 | Mdx/FVB | Exon 23 point mutation | FVB | |||||
| Chapman et al, 1989 | Mdx2cv | Intron 42 point mutation | C57BL/6 | 2 y | Mild | None | Chemically induced mutation, fewer revertant fibers, available through Jackson Labs (B6Ros.Cg-Dmdmdx-2Cv/J, stock #002388) | |
| Chapman et al, 1989 | Mdx3cv | Intron 65 point mutation | C57BL/6 | 2 y | Chemically induced mutation, full-length dystrophin expressed at ∼5% wild-type levels with all other isoforms eliminated, available through Jackson Labs (B6Ros.Cg-Dmdmdx-3Cv/J) | |||
| Chapman et al, 1989 | Mdx4cv | Exon 53 point mutation | C57BL/6 | 2 y | Chemically induced mutation, fewer revertant fibers, available through Jackson Labs (B6Ros.Cg-Dmdmdx-4Cv/J, stock #002378) | |||
| Chapman et al, 1989 | Mdx5cv | Exon 10 point mutation | C57BL/6 | 2 y | None | None | No significant cardiac phenotype observed | Chemically induced mutation, more severe skeletal muscle disease, available through Jackson Labs (B6Ros.Cg-Dmdmdx-5Cv/J, stock #002379) |
| Araki et al, 1997 | Mdx52 | Exon 52 deletion | C57BL/6 | 2 y | Targeted inactivation of hotspot (between exons 45-55), fewer revertant fibers | |||
| Wertz and Füchtbauer, 1998 | Mdx βgeo | Insertion of gene trap vector (ROSAβgeo) in exon 63 along with LacZ reporter | C57BL/10 | 2 y | Mild (≥10 mo) | Mild/none (≥10 mo) | All dystrophin isoforms affected, LacZ reporter replaces CR and CT domains | |
| Kudoh et al, 2005 | DMD-null | Cre-loxP mediated deletion of entire DMD gene | 2 y | None | None | No significant cardiac phenotype observed | No revertant fibers | |
| Double knockout models | ||||||||
| Guo et al, 2006 | mdx/α7−/− | α7-Integrin/dystrophin double deficient | mdx | ≤4 wk | Mild (≥20 days) | None | Ultrastructural changes seen by electron microscopy including necrosis and cardiomyocyte and mitochondrial disarray | |
| Deconinck et al, 1997 | Mdx/Utr−/− (Deconinck strain) | Utrophin/dystrophin double deficient | mdx | 20 wk | Moderate (≥8 wk) | Moderate (≥8 wk) | Cardiomyocyte fragility and necrosis early then fibrosis, LV dilation, and reduced functional parameters late, frequent ECG abnormalities | Largest utrophin isoform is inactivated by targeted mutation at utrophin exon 7 (other isoforms are active), severe dystrophic phenotype, available through Jackson Labs (Utrntm1Ked/Dmdmdx/J, stock #014563) |
| Grady et al, 1997 | Mdx/Utr−/− (Grady strain) | Utrophin/dystrophin double deficient | mdx | 20 wk | Moderate (≥8 wk) | Moderate (≥8 wk) | Cardiomyocyte fragility and necrosis early then fibrosis, LV dilation, and reduced functional parameters late, frequent ECG abnormalities | All utrophin isoforms are inactivated by targeted mutation at utrophin CR domain, severe dystrophic phenotype, available through Jackson Labs (stock #016622) |
| Megeney et al, 1996 | Mdx/Myod1 | MyoD/dystrophin double deficient | 12 mo | Severe (≥5 mo) | Mild/moderate (≥6 mo) | DCM occurs after 5-6 mo, fibrosis occurs by 10 mo, epicardial involvement of LV similar to human DMD cardiomyopathy | Severe dystrophic phenotype, MyoD only expressed in skeletal muscle | |
| Chandrasekharan et al, 2010 | Mdx/Cmah | Cmah/dystrophin double deficient | 11 mo | Moderate/severe (≥3 mo) | None | Cardiomyocyte necrosis early, no overt DCM | Humanized model of cytidine monophosphate-N-acetylneuraminic acid hydroxylase-like protein deletion, severe dystrophic phenotype, available from the Jackson Laboratory (stock #017929) | |
| Sacco et al, 2010 | Mdx/mTRG2 | Telomerase RNA/dystrophin double deficient | mdx/BL6 | 4-18 mo | Severe (≥32 wk) | Severe (≥32 wk) | DCM occurs by 8 mo | Severe dystrophic phenotype, available through Jackson Labs (stock #018915). |
| Sacco et al, 2010 | Mdx4cv/mTRG2 | Telomerase RNA/dystrophin double deficient | mdx4cv | 4-18 mo | Severe (≥32 wk) | Severe (≥32 wk) | DCM occurs by 8 mo | Severe dystrophic phenotype, available through Jackson Labs (stock #023535) |
| Grady et al, 1999 | Mdx/Dtna−/− | α-Dystrobrevin/dystrophin double deficient | 8-10 mo | Moderate/severe (≥4 wk) | none | No overt dilation/hypertrophy but increased nuclear cell infiltration and necrosis, increased susceptibility to stress-induced injury | Pronounced skeletal muscle phenotype but less severe than mdx/Utr−/−, available through Jackson Labs (B6.Cg-Terctm1Rdp Dmdmdx-4Cv/BlauJ, stock #023535) | |
| Li et al, 2009 | Mdx/Sgcd−/− | δ-Sarcoglycan/dystrophin double deficient | mdx/BL6 | 10-14 mo | Moderate/severe (≥8 wk) | Frequent ECG abnormalities, DCM ≥8 wk, increased risk of spontaneous death at 6 mo | Severe phenotype, knockdown-targeted replacement of Sgcd exon 2 leading to loss of whole sarcoglycan complex and sarcospan | |
DCM = dilated cardiomyopathy; ECG = electrocardiogram; HCM = hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; LV = left ventricular.