1. KLHL40 deficiency destabilizes thin filament proteins and promotes nemaline myopathy
- Author
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Garg, Ankit, ORourke, Jason, Long, Chengzu, Doering, Jonathan, Ravenscroft, Gianina, Bezprozvannaya, Svetlana, Nelson, Benjamin R., Beetz, Nadine, Li, Lin, Chen, She, Laing, Nigel G., Grange, Robert W., Bassel-Duby, Rhonda, and Olson, Eric N.
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Muscle diseases -- Risk factors -- Genetic aspects -- Research ,Muscle proteins -- Physiological aspects -- Research ,Cellular proteins -- Physiological aspects -- Research ,Health care industry - Abstract
Nemaline myopathy (NM) is a congenital myopathy that can result in lethal muscle dysfunction and is thought to be a disease of the sarcomere thin filament. Recently, several proteins of unknown function have been implicated in NM, but the mechanistic basis of their contribution to disease remains unresolved. Here, we demonstrated that loss of a muscle-specific protein, kelch-like family member 40 (KLHL40), results in a nemaline-like myopathy in mice that closely phenocopies muscle abnormalities observed in KLHL40-deficient patients. We determined that KLHL40 localizes to the sarcomere I band and A band and binds to nebulin (NEB), a protein frequently implicated in NM, as well as a putative thin filament protein, leiomodin 3 (LMOD3). KLHL40 belongs to the BTB-BACK-kelch (BBK) family of proteins, some of which have been shown to promote degradation of their substrates. In contrast, we found that KLHL40 promotes stability of NEB and LMOD3 and blocks LMOD3 ubiquitination. Accordingly, NEB and LMOD3 were reduced in skeletal muscle of both Klh[l40.sup.-/-] mice and KLHL40-deficient patients. Loss of sarcomere thin filament proteins is a frequent cause of NM; therefore, our data that KLHL40 stabilizes NEB and LMOD3 provide a potential basis for the development of NM in KLHL40-deficient patients., Introduction Nemaline myopathies (NMs) encompass a set of genetically heterogeneous diseases that are defined pathologically by the presence of characteristic rod-like structures, called nemaline bodies, in myofibers (1). Clinically, presentation [...]
- Published
- 2014
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