MuSK levels differ between adult skeletal muscles and influence postsynaptic plasticity

AR Punga, M Maj, S Lin, S Meinen… - European Journal of …, 2011 - Wiley Online Library
AR Punga, M Maj, S Lin, S Meinen, MA Rüegg
European Journal of Neuroscience, 2011Wiley Online Library
Muscle‐specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) is involved in the formation and maintenance of the
neuromuscular junction (NMJ), and is necessary for NMJ integrity. As muscle involvement is
strikingly selective in pathological conditions in which MuSK is targeted, including
congenital myasthenic syndrome with MuSK mutation and MuSK antibody‐seropositive
myasthenia gravis, we hypothesized that the postsynaptic response to MuSK‐agrin
signalling differs between adult muscles. Transcript levels of postsynaptic proteins were …
Abstract
Muscle‐specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK) is involved in the formation and maintenance of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ), and is necessary for NMJ integrity. As muscle involvement is strikingly selective in pathological conditions in which MuSK is targeted, including congenital myasthenic syndrome with MuSK mutation and MuSK antibody‐seropositive myasthenia gravis, we hypothesized that the postsynaptic response to MuSK‐agrin signalling differs between adult muscles. Transcript levels of postsynaptic proteins were compared between different muscles in wild‐type adult mice. MuSK expression was high in the soleus and sternomastoid muscles and low in the extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and omohyoid muscles. The acetylcholine receptor (AChR) α subunit followed a similar expression pattern, whereas expression of Dok‐7, Lrp4 and rapsyn was comparable between the muscles. We subsequently examined muscles in mice that overexpressed a miniaturized form of neural agrin or MuSK. In these transgenic mice, the soleus and sternomastoid muscles responded with formation of ectopic AChR clusters, whereas such clusters were almost absent in the EDL and omohyoid muscles. Electroporation of Dok‐7 revealed its important role as an activator of MuSK in AChR cluster formation in adult muscles. Together, our findings indicate for the first time that adult skeletal muscles harbour different endogenous levels of MuSK and that these levels determine the ability to form ectopic AChR clusters upon overexpression of agrin or MuSK. We believe that these findings are important for our understanding of adult muscle plasticity and the selective muscle involvement in neuromuscular disorders in which MuSK is diminished.
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