AI Article Synopsis

  • Dilated cardiomyopathy is a major cause of death in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) due to the absence of the dystrophin protein, leading to disorganization of heart muscle cells and gap junctions.
  • Research shows that the phosphorylation of connexin-43 (Cx43) is crucial for its proper function and localization, and that microtubule (MT) organization affects this process.
  • Treatment with colchicine improved the structure of MTs and reduced harmful heart remodeling in DMD mice, highlighting the need for understanding pS-Cx43 and MT interactions to create new therapies for DMD-related heart issues.

Article Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy is the leading cause of death in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an inherited degenerative disease of the cardiac and skeletal muscle caused by absence of the protein dystrophin. We showed one hallmark of DMD cardiomyopathy is the dysregulation of cardiac gap junction channel protein connexin-43 (Cx43). Proper Cx43 localization and function at the cardiac intercalated disc (ID) is regulated by post-translational phosphorylation of Cx43-carboxy-terminus residues S325/S328/S330 (pS-Cx43). Concurrently, Cx43 traffics along microtubules (MTs) for targeted delivery to the ID. In DMD hearts, absence of dystrophin results in a hyperdensified and disorganized MT cytoskeleton, yet the link with pS-Cx43 remains unaddressed. To gain insight into the relationship between MTs and pS-Cx43, DMD mice (mdx) and pS-Cx43-deficient (mdxS3A) mice were treated with an inhibitor of MT polymerization, colchicine (Colch). Colch treatment protected mdx, not mdxS3A mice, against Cx43 remodeling, improved MT directionality, and enhanced pS-Cx43/tubulin interaction. Likewise, severe arrhythmias were prevented in isoproterenol-stressed mdx, not mdxS3A mice. Furthermore, MT directionality was improved in pS-Cx43-mimicking mdx (mdxS3E). Mdxutr and mdxutrS3A mice, lacking one copy of dystrophin homolog utrophin, displayed enhanced cardiac fibrosis and reduced lifespan compared with mdxutrS3E; and Colch treatment corrected cardiac fibrosis in mdxutr but not mdxutrS3A. Collectively, the data suggest that improved MT directionality reduces Cx43 remodeling and that pS-Cx43 is necessary and sufficient to regulate MT organization, which plays crucial role in correcting cardiac dysfunction in DMD mice. Thus, identification of novel organizational mechanisms acting on pS-Cx43-MT will help develop novel cardioprotective therapies for DMD cardiomyopathy. We found that colchicine administration to Cx43-phospho-deficient dystrophic mice fails to protect against Cx43 remodeling. Conversely, Cx43-phospho-mimic dystrophic mice display a normalized MT network. We envision a bidirectional regulation whereby correction of the dystrophic MTs leads to correction of Cx43 remodeling, which in turn leads to further correction of the MTs. Our findings suggest a link between phospho-Cx43 and MTs that provides strong foundations for novel therapeutics in DMD cardiomyopathy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9639757PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00179.2022DOI Listing

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