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Induction and Myofibrillar Targeting of CARP, and Suppression of the Nkx2. 5 Pathway in the MDM Mouse with Impaired Titin-based Signaling

  • Christian C. Witt
  • , Yasuko Ono
  • , Eva Puschmann
  • , Mark McNabb
  • , Yiming Wu
  • , Michael Gotthardt
  • , Stephanie H. Witt
  • , Markus Haak
  • , Dietmar Labeit
  • , Carol C. Gregorio
  • , Hiroyuki Sorimachi
  • , Henk Granzier
  • , Siegfried Labeit

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Muscular dystrophy with myositis (mdm) is a recessive mouse mutation that is caused by a small deletion in the giant elastic muscle protein titin. Homozygous mdm/mdm mice develop a progressive muscular dystrophy, leading to death at ∼2 months of age. We surveyed the transcriptomes of skeletal muscles from 24 day old homozygous mdm/mdm and +/+ wild-type mice, an age when MDM animals have normal passive and active tensions and sarcomeric structure. Of the 12,488 genes surveyed (U74 affymetrix array), 75 genes were twofold to 30-fold differentially expressed, including CARP (cardiac ankyrin repeat protein), ankrd2/Arpp (a CARP-like protein) and MLP (muscle LIM protein), all of which associate with the titin filament system. The four genes most strongly affected (eightfold to 30-fold change) were all members of the CARP-regulated Nkx-2.5-dependent signal pathway, and CARP mRNA level was 30-fold elevated in MDM skeletal muscle tissues. The CARP protein overexpressed in MDM became associated with the I-band region of the sarcomere. The mdm mutation excises the C-terminal portion of titin's N2A region, abolishing its interaction with p94/calpain-3 protease. Thus, the composition of the titin N2A protein complex is altered in MDM by incorporation of CARP and loss of p94/calpain-3. These changes were absent from the following control tissues (1) cardiac muscles from homozygous mdm/mdm animals, (2) skeletal and cardiac muscle from heterozygous mdm/+ animals, and (3) dystrophic muscles from MDX mice. Thus, the altered composition of the titin N2A complex is specific for the titin-based skeletal muscular dystrophy in MDM.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)145-154
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Molecular Biology
Volume336
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 6 2004

Keywords

  • CARP
  • Calpain-3
  • MDM mouse muscular dystrophy
  • Muscle ankyrin repeat protein
  • Titin

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biophysics
  • Structural Biology
  • Molecular Biology

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