AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates inclusion body myositis (IBM), focusing on the role of TDP-43 protein and its implications in muscle pathology.
  • It found that cryptic peptides linked to TDP-43 were present in 65% of muscle biopsies from IBM patients, but absent in other controls, indicating potential as a biomarker for IBM.
  • The findings suggest that restoring TDP-43 function might help slow down muscle degeneration in patients with this disease.

Article Abstract

Objective: Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is an idiopathic inflammatory myopathy with muscle pathology characterized by endomysial inflammation, rimmed vacuoles, and cytoplasmic mislocalization of transactive response DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43). We aimed to determine whether loss of TDP-43 splicing repression led to the production of "cryptic peptides" that could be detected in muscle biopsies as a useful biomarker for IBM.

Methods: We used an antisera against a neoepitope encoded by a TDP-43-dependent cryptic exon within hepatoma-derived growth factor-like protein 2 (HDGFL2) for immunohistochemical analysis on muscle biopsy samples of 122 patients with IBM, 181 disease controls, and 16 healthy controls without abnormal muscle pathology. In situ hybridization was also utilized to detect the localization of cryptic HDGFL2 transcripts.

Results: We found cryptic HDGFL2 peptides localized within myonuclei from muscle biopsies in 79 of 122 patients with IBM (65%), and this staining correlated with TDP-43 depletion. In contrast, cryptic HDGFL2 immunoreactivity was absent in 197 muscle biopsies from a variety of disease controls, except for 2 patients with vacuolar myopathies. Notably, we show that cryptic HDGFL2 transcripts are accompanied by the detection of cryptic HDGFL2 in muscle fibers of IBM without rimmed vacuoles and TDP-43 aggregates.

Interpretation: Together, our findings establish that loss of TDP-43 splicing repression occurs in myonuclei of IBM skeletal muscle and suggest that detection of cryptic peptides in muscle biopsies may be a useful biomarker. We suggest that a therapeutic strategy designed to restore TDP-43 function should be considered to attenuate the degeneration of skeletal muscle in this devastating disease. ANN NEUROL 2025.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ana.27167DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates inclusion body myositis (IBM), focusing on the role of TDP-43 protein and its implications in muscle pathology.
  • It found that cryptic peptides linked to TDP-43 were present in 65% of muscle biopsies from IBM patients, but absent in other controls, indicating potential as a biomarker for IBM.
  • The findings suggest that restoring TDP-43 function might help slow down muscle degeneration in patients with this disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The letter discusses how new types of cryptic proteins produced by TDP-43 dysfunction could indicate TDP-43-related issues in neurodegenerative diseases.
  • It highlights the significance of these novel proteins as potential biomarkers for diagnosing or understanding these diseases.
  • The findings could lead to improved methods for detecting and studying conditions linked to TDP-43 pathology, such as ALS and frontotemporal dementia.
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Although loss of TAR DNA-binding protein 43 kDa (TDP-43) splicing repression is well documented in postmortem tissues of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD), whether this abnormality occurs during early-stage disease remains unresolved. Cryptic exon inclusion reflects loss of function of TDP-43, and thus detection of proteins containing cryptic exon-encoded neoepitopes in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or blood could reveal the earliest stages of TDP-43 dysregulation in patients. Here we use a newly characterized monoclonal antibody specific to a TDP-43-dependent cryptic epitope (encoded by the cryptic exon found in HDGFL2) to show that loss of TDP-43 splicing repression occurs in ALS-FTD, including in presymptomatic C9orf72 mutation carriers.

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