André Laurène M, Ausems C Rosanne M, Wansink Derick G, Wieringa Bé
Department of Cell Biology, Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Department of Genetics, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands.
Front Neurol. 2018 May 28;9:368. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00368. eCollection 2018.
Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and 2 (DM2) are autosomal dominant degenerative neuromuscular disorders characterized by progressive skeletal muscle weakness, atrophy, and myotonia with progeroid features. Although both DM1 and DM2 are characterized by skeletal muscle dysfunction and also share other clinical features, the diseases differ in the muscle groups that are affected. In DM1, distal muscles are mainly affected, whereas in DM2 problems are mostly found in proximal muscles. In addition, manifestation in DM1 is generally more severe, with possible congenital or childhood-onset of disease and prominent CNS involvement. DM1 and DM2 are caused by expansion of (CTG•CAG)n and (CCTG•CAGG)n repeats in the 3' non-coding region of and in intron 1 of , respectively, and in overlapping antisense genes. This critical review will focus on the pleiotropic problems that occur during development, growth, regeneration, and aging of skeletal muscle in patients who inherited these expansions. The current best-accepted idea is that most muscle symptoms can be explained by pathomechanistic effects of repeat expansion on RNA-mediated pathways. However, aberrations in DNA replication and transcription of the DM loci or in protein translation and proteome homeostasis could also affect the control of proliferation and differentiation of muscle progenitor cells or the maintenance and physiological integrity of muscle fibers during a patient's lifetime. Here, we will discuss these molecular and cellular processes and summarize current knowledge about the role of embryonic and adult muscle-resident stem cells in growth, homeostasis, regeneration, and premature aging of healthy and diseased muscle tissue. Of particular interest is that also progenitor cells from extramuscular sources, such as pericytes and mesoangioblasts, can participate in myogenic differentiation. We will examine the potential of all these types of cells in the application of regenerative medicine for muscular dystrophies and evaluate new possibilities for their use in future therapy of DM.
1型强直性肌营养不良(DM1)和2型强直性肌营养不良(DM2)是常染色体显性遗传性退行性神经肌肉疾病,其特征为进行性骨骼肌无力、萎缩以及伴有早衰特征的肌强直。尽管DM1和DM2均以骨骼肌功能障碍为特征,且具有其他一些共同的临床特征,但这两种疾病在受影响的肌肉群方面存在差异。在DM1中,主要受影响的是远端肌肉,而在DM2中,问题大多出现在近端肌肉。此外,DM1的症状通常更为严重,可能在先天性或儿童期发病,且中枢神经系统受累较为明显。DM1和DM2分别由位于 和 内含子1的3'非编码区以及重叠反义基因中的(CTG•CAG)n和(CCTG•CAGG)n重复序列扩增引起。本综述将聚焦于遗传了这些重复序列扩增的患者在骨骼肌发育、生长、再生和衰老过程中出现的多效性问题。目前最被广泛接受的观点是,大多数肌肉症状可通过重复序列扩增对RNA介导途径的病理机制作用来解释。然而,DM基因座的DNA复制和转录异常,或蛋白质翻译及蛋白质组稳态异常,也可能在患者一生中影响肌肉祖细胞增殖和分化的控制,或肌肉纤维的维持及生理完整性。在此,我们将讨论这些分子和细胞过程,并总结目前关于胚胎和成体肌肉驻留干细胞在健康和患病肌肉组织生长、稳态、再生及早衰中的作用的知识。特别值得关注的是,来自肌肉外来源的祖细胞,如周细胞和间充质血管母细胞,也可参与肌源性分化。我们将研究所有这些类型的细胞在再生医学治疗肌肉营养不良症中的应用潜力,并评估它们在未来DM治疗中的新应用可能性。