Enhanced Muscular Dystrophy from Loss of Dysferlin Is Accompanied by Impaired Annexin A6 Translocation after Sarcolemmal Disruption

Dysferlin is a membrane-associated protein implicated in membrane resealing; loss of dysferlin leads to muscular dystrophy. We examined the same loss-of-function Dysf mutation in two different mouse strains, 129T2/SvEmsJ ( Dysf129 ) and C57BL/6J ( DysfB6 ). Although there are many genetic difference...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of pathology 2016-06, Vol.186 (6), p.1610-1622
Hauptverfasser: Demonbreun, Alexis R, Allen, Madison V, Warner, James L, Barefield, David Y, Krishnan, Swathi, Swanson, Kaitlin E, Earley, Judy U, McNally, Elizabeth M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dysferlin is a membrane-associated protein implicated in membrane resealing; loss of dysferlin leads to muscular dystrophy. We examined the same loss-of-function Dysf mutation in two different mouse strains, 129T2/SvEmsJ ( Dysf129 ) and C57BL/6J ( DysfB6 ). Although there are many genetic differences between these two strains, we focused on polymorphisms in Anxa6 because these variants were previously associated with modifying a pathologically distinct form of muscular dystrophy and increased the production of a truncated annexin A6 protein. Dysferlin deficiency in the C57BL/6J background was associated with increased Evan's Blue dye uptake into muscle and increased serum creatine kinase compared to the 129T2/SvEmsJ background. In the C57BL/6J background, dysferlin loss was associated with enhanced pathologic severity, characterized by decreased mean fiber cross-sectional area, increased internalized nuclei, and increased fibrosis, compared to that in Dysf129 mice. Macrophage infiltrate was also increased in DysfB6 muscle. High-resolution imaging of live myofibers demonstrated that fibers from DysfB6 mice displayed reduced translocation of full-length annexin A6 to the site of laser-induced sarcolemmal disruption compared to Dysf129 myofibers, and impaired translocation of annexin A6 associated with impaired resealing of the sarcolemma. These results provide one mechanism by which the C57BL/6J background intensifies dysferlinopathy, giving rise to a more severe form of muscular dystrophy in the DysfB6 mouse model through increased membrane leak and inflammation.
ISSN:0002-9440
1525-2191
DOI:10.1016/j.ajpath.2016.02.005