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1.
JACC Basic Transl Sci ; 8(9): 1198-1211, 2023 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37791314

RESUMEN

Variants in the gene myosin-binding protein C3 (MYBPC3) account for approximately 50% of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), leading to reduced levels of myosin-binding protein C3 (MyBP-C), the protein product made by gene MYBPC3. Elucidation of the pathways that regulate MyBP-C protein homeostasis could uncover new therapeutic strategies. Toward this goal, we screened a library of 2,426 bioactive compounds and identified JG98, an allosteric modulator of heat shock protein 70 that inhibits interaction with Bcl-2-associated athanogene (BAG) domain co-chaperones. JG98 reduces MyBP-C protein levels. Furthermore, genetic reduction of BAG3 phenocopies treatment with JG-98 by reducing MYBP-C protein levels.. Thus, an unbiased compound screen identified the heat shock protein 70-BAG3 complex as a regulator of MyBP-C stability.

2.
Circ Heart Fail ; 15(6): e009521, 2022 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35543134

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Defects in energetics are thought to be central to the pathophysiology of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM); yet, the determinants of ATP availability are not known. The purpose of this study is to ascertain the nature and extent of metabolic reprogramming in human HCM, and its potential impact on contractile function. METHODS: We conducted proteomic and targeted, quantitative metabolomic analyses on heart tissue from patients with HCM and from nonfailing control human hearts. RESULTS: In the proteomic analysis, the greatest differences observed in HCM samples compared with controls were increased abundances of extracellular matrix and intermediate filament proteins and decreased abundances of muscle creatine kinase and mitochondrial proteins involved in fatty acid oxidation. These differences in protein abundance were coupled with marked reductions in acyl carnitines, byproducts of fatty acid oxidation, in HCM samples. Conversely, the ketone body 3-hydroxybutyrate, branched chain amino acids, and their breakdown products, were all significantly increased in HCM hearts. ATP content, phosphocreatine, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide and its phosphate derivatives, NADP and NADPH, and acetyl CoA were also severely reduced in HCM compared with control hearts. Functional assays performed on human skinned myocardial fibers demonstrated that the magnitude of observed reduction in ATP content in the HCM samples would be expected to decrease the rate of cross-bridge detachment. Moreover, left atrial size, an indicator of diastolic compliance, was inversely correlated with ATP content in hearts from patients with HCM. CONCLUSIONS: HCM hearts display profound deficits in nucleotide availability with markedly reduced capacity for fatty acid oxidation and increases in ketone bodies and branched chain amino acids. These results have important therapeutic implications for the future design of metabolic modulators to treat HCM.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica , Insuficiencia Cardíaca , Adenosina Trifosfato/metabolismo , Aminoácidos de Cadena Ramificada/metabolismo , Ácidos Grasos/metabolismo , Insuficiencia Cardíaca/metabolismo , Humanos , Metaboloma , Miocitos Cardíacos/metabolismo , Proteoma , Proteómica
3.
Circ Genom Precis Med ; 13(5): 396-405, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32841044

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Pathogenic variants in MYBPC3, encoding cardiac MyBP-C (myosin binding protein C), are the most common cause of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. A large number of unique MYBPC3 variants and relatively small genotyped hypertrophic cardiomyopathy cohorts have precluded detailed genotype-phenotype correlations. METHODS: Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and MYBPC3 variants were identified from the Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry. Variant types and locations were analyzed, morphological severity was assessed, and time-event analysis was performed (composite clinical outcome of sudden death, class III/IV heart failure, left ventricular assist device/transplant, atrial fibrillation). For selected missense variants falling in enriched domains, myofilament localization and degradation rates were measured in vitro. RESULTS: Among 4756 genotyped patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry, 1316 patients were identified with adjudicated pathogenic truncating (N=234 unique variants, 1047 patients) or nontruncating (N=22 unique variants, 191 patients) variants in MYBPC3. Truncating variants were evenly dispersed throughout the gene, and hypertrophy severity and outcomes were not associated with variant location (grouped by 5'-3' quartiles or by founder variant subgroup). Nontruncating pathogenic variants clustered in the C3, C6, and C10 domains (18 of 22, 82%, P<0.001 versus Genome Aggregation Database common variants) and were associated with similar hypertrophy severity and adverse event rates as observed with truncating variants. MyBP-C with variants in the C3, C6, and C10 domains was expressed in rat ventricular myocytes. C10 mutant MyBP-C failed to incorporate into myofilaments and degradation rates were accelerated by ≈90%, while C3 and C6 mutant MyBP-C incorporated normally with degradation rate similar to wild-type. CONCLUSIONS: Truncating variants account for 91% of MYBPC3 pathogenic variants and cause similar clinical severity and outcomes regardless of location, consistent with locus-independent loss-of-function. Nontruncating MYBPC3 pathogenic variants are regionally clustered, and a subset also cause loss of function through failure of myofilament incorporation and rapid degradation. Cardiac morphology and clinical outcomes are similar in patients with truncating versus nontruncating variants.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/genética , Proteínas Portadoras/genética , Adolescente , Adulto , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/diagnóstico , Niño , Femenino , Genotipo , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Miofibrillas/metabolismo , Miofibrillas/patología , Fenotipo , Polimorfismo Genético , Sistema de Registros , Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad , Análisis Espacial , Adulto Joven
4.
JCI Insight ; 3(11)2018 06 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29875314

RESUMEN

Cardiac myosin binding protein C (MYBPC3) is the most commonly mutated gene associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Haploinsufficiency of full-length MYBPC3 and disruption of proteostasis have both been proposed as central to HCM disease pathogenesis. Discriminating the relative contributions of these 2 mechanisms requires fundamental knowledge of how turnover of WT and mutant MYBPC3 proteins is regulated. We expressed several disease-causing mutations in MYBPC3 in primary neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes. In contrast to WT MYBPC3, mutant proteins showed reduced expression and failed to localize to the sarcomere. In an unbiased coimmunoprecipitation/mass spectrometry screen, we identified HSP70-family chaperones as interactors of both WT and mutant MYBPC3. Heat shock cognate 70 kDa (HSC70) was the most abundant chaperone interactor. Knockdown of HSC70 significantly slowed degradation of both WT and mutant MYBPC3, while pharmacologic activation of HSC70 and HSP70 accelerated degradation. HSC70 was expressed in discrete striations in the sarcomere. Expression of mutant MYBPC3 did not affect HSC70 localization, nor did it induce a protein folding stress response or ubiquitin proteasome dysfunction. Together these data suggest that WT and mutant MYBPC3 proteins are clients for HSC70, and that the HSC70 chaperone system plays a major role in regulating MYBPC3 protein turnover.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/patología , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Proteínas del Choque Térmico HSC70/metabolismo , Acetilcisteína/análogos & derivados , Acetilcisteína/farmacología , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/genética , Proteínas Portadoras/genética , Núcleo Celular/metabolismo , Técnicas de Silenciamiento del Gen , Células HEK293 , Proteínas del Choque Térmico HSC70/genética , Haploinsuficiencia , Humanos , Miocardio/patología , Complejo de la Endopetidasa Proteasomal/efectos de los fármacos , Inhibidores de Proteasoma/farmacología , Proteolisis/efectos de los fármacos , Proteostasis/genética , Ratas , Sarcómeros/patología , Tabique Interventricular/patología
5.
Circ Cardiovasc Genet ; 7(4): 434-43, 2014 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25031304

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Heterozygous mutations in sarcomere genes in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) are proposed to exert their effect through gain of function for missense mutations or loss of function for truncating mutations. However, allelic expression from individual mutations has not been sufficiently characterized to support this exclusive distinction in human HCM. METHODS AND RESULTS: Sarcomere transcript and protein levels were analyzed in septal myectomy and transplant specimens from 46 genotyped HCM patients with or without sarcomere gene mutations and 10 control hearts. For truncating mutations in MYBPC3, the average ratio of mutant:wild-type transcripts was ≈1:5, in contrast to ≈1:1 for all sarcomere missense mutations, confirming that nonsense transcripts are uniquely unstable. However, total MYBPC3 mRNA was significantly increased by 9-fold in HCM samples with MYBPC3 mutations compared with control hearts and with HCM samples without sarcomere gene mutations. Full-length MYBPC3 protein content was not different between MYBPC3 mutant HCM and control samples, and no truncated proteins were detected. By absolute quantification of abundance with multiple reaction monitoring, stoichiometric ratios of mutant sarcomere proteins relative to wild type were strikingly variable in a mutation-specific manner, with the fraction of mutant protein ranging from 30% to 84%. CONCLUSIONS: These results challenge the concept that haploinsufficiency is a unifying mechanism for HCM caused by MYBPC3 truncating mutations. The range of allelic imbalance for several missense sarcomere mutations suggests that certain mutant proteins may be more or less stable or incorporate more or less efficiently into the sarcomere than wild-type proteins. These mutation-specific properties may distinctly influence disease phenotypes.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/genética , Sarcómeros/genética , Alelos , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/metabolismo , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/patología , Proteínas Portadoras/genética , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Ecocardiografía , Femenino , Regulación de la Expresión Génica , Genotipo , Heterocigoto , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Mutación Missense , Miocardio/metabolismo , Proteómica , ARN Mensajero/metabolismo
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