학술논문

Inhibition of DNAJ-HSP70 interaction improves strength in muscular dystrophy
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Journal of Clinical Investigation. August, 2020, Vol. 130 Issue 8, p4470, 16 p.
Subject
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.
Muscular dystrophy -- Genetic aspects
Skeletal muscle -- Genetic aspects
Heat shock proteins -- Genetic aspects
Health care industry
Language
English
ISSN
0021-9738
Abstract
Dominant mutations in the HSP70 cochaperone DNAJB6 cause a late-onset muscle disease termed limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type D1 (LGMDD1), which is characterized by protein aggregation and vacuolar myopathology. Disease mutations reside within the G/F domain of DNAJB6, but the molecular mechanisms underlying dysfunction are not well understood. Using yeast, cell culture, and mouse models of LGMDD1, we found that the toxicity associated with disease-associated DNAJB6 required its interaction with HSP70 and that abrogating this interaction genetically or with small molecules was protective. In skeletal muscle, DNAJB6 localizes to the Z-disc with HSP70. Whereas HSP70 normally diffused rapidly between the Z-disc and sarcoplasm, the rate of diffusion of HSP70 in LGMDD1 mouse muscle was diminished, probably because it had an unusual affinity for the Z-disc and mutant DNAJB6. Treating LGMDD1 mice with a small-molecule inhibitor of the DNAJHSP70 complex remobilized HSP70, improved strength, and corrected myopathology. These data support a model in which LGMDD1 mutations in DNAJB6 are a gain-of-function disease that is, counterintuitively, mediated via HSP70 binding. Thus, therapeutic approaches targeting HSP70-DNAJB6 may be effective in treating this inherited muscular dystrophy.
Introduction Limb-girdle muscular dystrophies (LGMDs) are a family of hereditary muscle diseases that are inherited in an autosomal recessive or dominant manner (1). Most recessively inherited LGMDs are postulated to [...]