Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations

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Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations. / Sonne, Alexander; Peverelli, Lorenzo; Hernandez-Lain, Aurelio; Domínguez-González, Cristina; Andersen, Jesper L.; Milone, Margherita; Beggs, Alan H.; Ochala, Julien.

I: American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, Bind 324, Nr. 3, 2023, s. C769–C776.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sonne, A, Peverelli, L, Hernandez-Lain, A, Domínguez-González, C, Andersen, JL, Milone, M, Beggs, AH & Ochala, J 2023, 'Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations', American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, bind 324, nr. 3, s. C769–C776. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023

APA

Sonne, A., Peverelli, L., Hernandez-Lain, A., Domínguez-González, C., Andersen, J. L., Milone, M., Beggs, A. H., & Ochala, J. (2023). Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations. American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, 324(3), C769–C776. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023

Vancouver

Sonne A, Peverelli L, Hernandez-Lain A, Domínguez-González C, Andersen JL, Milone M o.a. Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations. American journal of physiology. Cell physiology. 2023;324(3):C769–C776. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023

Author

Sonne, Alexander ; Peverelli, Lorenzo ; Hernandez-Lain, Aurelio ; Domínguez-González, Cristina ; Andersen, Jesper L. ; Milone, Margherita ; Beggs, Alan H. ; Ochala, Julien. / Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations. I: American journal of physiology. Cell physiology. 2023 ; Bind 324, Nr. 3. s. C769–C776.

Bibtex

@article{b46b435442dc40fa99b75252763b4b50,
title = "Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations",
abstract = "Congenital myopathies are a vast group of genetic muscle diseases. Among the causes are mutations in the MYH2 gene resulting in truncated type IIa myosin heavy chains (MyHCs). The precise cellular and molecular mechanisms by which these mutations induce skeletal muscle symptoms remain obscure. Hence, in the present study, we aimed to explore whether such genetic defects would alter the presence as well as the post-translational modifications of MyHCs and the functionality of myosin molecules. For this, we dissected muscle fibers from four myopathic patients with MYH2 truncating mutations and from five human healthy controls. We then assessed 1) MyHCs presence/post-translational modifications using LC/MS; 2) relaxed myosin conformation and concomitant ATP consumption with a loaded Mant-ATP chase setup; 3) myosin activation with an unloaded in vitro motility assay; and 4) cellular force production with a myofiber mechanical setup. Interestingly, the type IIa MyHC with one additional acetylated lysine (Lys35-Ac) was present in the patients. This was accompanied by 1) a higher ATP demand of myosin heads in the disordered-relaxed conformation; 2) faster actomyosin kinetics; and 3) reduced muscle fiber force. Overall, our findings indicate that MYH2 truncating mutations impact myosin presence/functionality in human adult mature myofibers by disrupting the ATPase activity and actomyosin complex. These are likely important molecular pathological disturbances leading to the myopathic phenotype in patients.",
keywords = "congenital myopathy, myosin, skeletal muscle",
author = "Alexander Sonne and Lorenzo Peverelli and Aurelio Hernandez-Lain and Cristina Dom{\'i}nguez-Gonz{\'a}lez and Andersen, {Jesper L.} and Margherita Milone and Beggs, {Alan H.} and Julien Ochala",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023",
language = "English",
volume = "324",
pages = "C769–C776",
journal = "American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology",
issn = "0363-6143",
publisher = "American Physiological Society",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Myosin post-translational modifications and function in the presence of myopathy-linked truncating MYH2 mutations

AU - Sonne, Alexander

AU - Peverelli, Lorenzo

AU - Hernandez-Lain, Aurelio

AU - Domínguez-González, Cristina

AU - Andersen, Jesper L.

AU - Milone, Margherita

AU - Beggs, Alan H.

AU - Ochala, Julien

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Congenital myopathies are a vast group of genetic muscle diseases. Among the causes are mutations in the MYH2 gene resulting in truncated type IIa myosin heavy chains (MyHCs). The precise cellular and molecular mechanisms by which these mutations induce skeletal muscle symptoms remain obscure. Hence, in the present study, we aimed to explore whether such genetic defects would alter the presence as well as the post-translational modifications of MyHCs and the functionality of myosin molecules. For this, we dissected muscle fibers from four myopathic patients with MYH2 truncating mutations and from five human healthy controls. We then assessed 1) MyHCs presence/post-translational modifications using LC/MS; 2) relaxed myosin conformation and concomitant ATP consumption with a loaded Mant-ATP chase setup; 3) myosin activation with an unloaded in vitro motility assay; and 4) cellular force production with a myofiber mechanical setup. Interestingly, the type IIa MyHC with one additional acetylated lysine (Lys35-Ac) was present in the patients. This was accompanied by 1) a higher ATP demand of myosin heads in the disordered-relaxed conformation; 2) faster actomyosin kinetics; and 3) reduced muscle fiber force. Overall, our findings indicate that MYH2 truncating mutations impact myosin presence/functionality in human adult mature myofibers by disrupting the ATPase activity and actomyosin complex. These are likely important molecular pathological disturbances leading to the myopathic phenotype in patients.

AB - Congenital myopathies are a vast group of genetic muscle diseases. Among the causes are mutations in the MYH2 gene resulting in truncated type IIa myosin heavy chains (MyHCs). The precise cellular and molecular mechanisms by which these mutations induce skeletal muscle symptoms remain obscure. Hence, in the present study, we aimed to explore whether such genetic defects would alter the presence as well as the post-translational modifications of MyHCs and the functionality of myosin molecules. For this, we dissected muscle fibers from four myopathic patients with MYH2 truncating mutations and from five human healthy controls. We then assessed 1) MyHCs presence/post-translational modifications using LC/MS; 2) relaxed myosin conformation and concomitant ATP consumption with a loaded Mant-ATP chase setup; 3) myosin activation with an unloaded in vitro motility assay; and 4) cellular force production with a myofiber mechanical setup. Interestingly, the type IIa MyHC with one additional acetylated lysine (Lys35-Ac) was present in the patients. This was accompanied by 1) a higher ATP demand of myosin heads in the disordered-relaxed conformation; 2) faster actomyosin kinetics; and 3) reduced muscle fiber force. Overall, our findings indicate that MYH2 truncating mutations impact myosin presence/functionality in human adult mature myofibers by disrupting the ATPase activity and actomyosin complex. These are likely important molecular pathological disturbances leading to the myopathic phenotype in patients.

KW - congenital myopathy

KW - myosin

KW - skeletal muscle

U2 - 10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023

DO - 10.1152/ajpcell.00002.2023

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36745529

AN - SCOPUS:85150311463

VL - 324

SP - C769–C776

JO - American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology

JF - American Journal of Physiology: Cell Physiology

SN - 0363-6143

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 341262299