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A pathogenic mechanism associated with myopathies and structural birth defects involves TPM2-directed myogenesis
Jennifer McAdow, Shuo Yang, Tiffany Ou, Gary Huang, Matthew B. Dobbs, Christina A. Gurnett, Michael J. Greenberg, Aaron N. Johnson
Jennifer McAdow, Shuo Yang, Tiffany Ou, Gary Huang, Matthew B. Dobbs, Christina A. Gurnett, Michael J. Greenberg, Aaron N. Johnson
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Research Article Muscle biology

A pathogenic mechanism associated with myopathies and structural birth defects involves TPM2-directed myogenesis

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Abstract

Nemaline myopathy (NM) is the most common congenital myopathy, characterized by extreme weakness of the respiratory, limb, and facial muscles. Pathogenic variants in Tropomyosin 2 (TPM2), which encodes a skeletal muscle–specific actin binding protein essential for sarcomere function, cause a spectrum of musculoskeletal disorders that include NM as well as cap myopathy, congenital fiber type disproportion, and distal arthrogryposis (DA). The in vivo pathomechanisms underlying TPM2-related disorders are unknown, so we expressed a series of dominant, pathogenic TPM2 variants in Drosophila embryos and found 4 variants significantly affected muscle development and muscle function. Transient overexpression of the 4 variants also disrupted the morphogenesis of mouse myotubes in vitro and negatively affected zebrafish muscle development in vivo. We used transient overexpression assays in zebrafish to characterize 2 potentially novel TPM2 variants and 1 recurring variant that we identified in patients with DA (V129A, E139K, A155T, respectively) and found these variants caused musculoskeletal defects similar to those of known pathogenic variants. The consistency of musculoskeletal phenotypes in our assays correlated with the severity of clinical phenotypes observed in our patients with DA, suggesting disrupted myogenesis is a potentially novel pathomechanism of TPM2 disorders and that our myogenic assays can predict the clinical severity of TPM2 variants.

Authors

Jennifer McAdow, Shuo Yang, Tiffany Ou, Gary Huang, Matthew B. Dobbs, Christina A. Gurnett, Michael J. Greenberg, Aaron N. Johnson

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Figure 8

TPM2 variants did not affect swim function.

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TPM2 variants did not affect swim function.
(A) Automated tracking of t...
(A) Automated tracking of the startle response in 6 dpf larvae. EthoVision imaging software (Noldus) tracked larvae for 3 seconds after a mechanical stimulus. Red lines show the locomotor path of representative larvae. Endpoints are marked by a square. (B–D) Box plots showing swim function. The startle response in larvae that expressed E41K, K49Del, R91G, and E122K was not significantly different from larvae that expressed the benign variant E273K. Swim distance, average escape velocity, and maximum velocity of larvae that expressed TPM2 variants were reported by imaging software and normalized to larvae that expressed wild-type TPM2. Significance was determined by 1-way ANOVA. n ≥ 25 larvae per treatment. Error bars, SEM.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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