Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6041331 | Neuromuscular Disorders | 2014 | 39 Pages |
Abstract
Disease processes and trauma affecting nerve-evoked muscle activity, motor neurons, synapses and myofibers cause different levels of muscle weakness, i.e., reduced maximal force production in response to voluntary activation or nerve stimulation. However, the mechanisms of muscle weakness are not well known. Using murine models of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (SOD1G93A transgenic mice), congenital myasthenic syndrome (AChE knockout mice and MuskV789M/â mutant mice), Schwartz-Jampel syndrome (Hspg2C1532YNEO/C1532YNEO mutant mice) and traumatic nerve injury (Neurotomized wild-type mice), we show that the reduced maximal activation capacity (the ability of the nerve to maximally activate the muscle) explains 52%, 58% and 100% of severe weakness in respectively SOD1G93A, Neurotomized and Musk mice, whereas muscle atrophy only explains 37%, 27% and 0%. We also demonstrate that the impaired maximal activation capacity observed in SOD1, Neurotomized, and Musk mice is not highly related to Hdac4 gene upregulation. Moreover, in SOD1 and Neurotomized mice our results suggest LC3, Fn14, Bcl3 and Gadd45a as candidate genes involved in the maintenance of the severe atrophic state. In conclusion, our study indicates that muscle weakness can result from the triggering of different signaling pathways. This knowledge may be helpful in designing therapeutic strategies and finding new drug targets for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, congenital myasthenic syndrome, Schwartz-Jampel syndrome and nerve injury.
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Authors
Arnaud Ferry, Pierre Joanne, Wahiba Hadj-Said, Alban Vignaud, Alain Lilienbaum, Christophe Hourdé, Fadia Medja, Philippe Noirez, Frederic Charbonnier, Arnaud Chatonnet, Frederic Chevessier, Sophie Nicole, Onnik Agbulut, Gillian Butler-Browne,