开发一种高通量筛选方法,以鉴定用于治疗杜氏肌营养不良的小分子肌张力增强剂。

IF 5.3 2区 医学 Q2 CELL BIOLOGY Skeletal Muscle Pub Date : 2019-12-12 DOI:10.1186/s13395-019-0218-x
Cynthia Shu, Ariana N Kaxon-Rupp, Judd R Collado, Robert Damoiseaux, Rachelle H Crosbie
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:杜氏肌营养不良症(DMD)是由于失去与细胞外基质的肌膜连接而引起的。在DMD mdx小鼠模型中,转基因过表达跨膜蛋白sarcospan (SSPN)可通过恢复膜粘附而显著降低疾病病理。确定基于sspn的治疗方法有可能使患有DMD和其他形式的肌肉营养不良症的患者受益,这些疾病是由肌肉细胞粘附缺陷引起的。方法:采用标准克隆方法制备C2C12成肌细胞,稳定转染人SSPN启动子活性荧光报告基因。实验开发和筛选在核心设施中进行,使用液体处理器和专门用于384孔微孔板格式的成像系统。用定量PCR分析药物处理细胞的靶基因表达,用免疫印迹法分析靶蛋白表达。结果:我们研究了SSPN及其相关蛋白在成肌细胞分化成肌管过程中的基因表达谱,发现分化3天后表达增加。我们创建了表达EGFP报告子SSPN启动子活性的C2C12肌肉细胞,并观察到在分化过程中报告子水平的相应增加。高通量筛选的实验条件优化为384孔微孔板格式和高含量成像仪,用于报告水平的可视化。我们对3200种化合物进行了筛选,并确定了7种,其中包括l型钙通道拮抗剂的过度代表,这表明SSPN基因活性对钙敏感。对选择性打击的进一步验证表明,钙通道抑制剂非洛地平增加了野生型和肌营养不良蛋白缺陷肌管中SSPN转录物和蛋白水平,但没有增加分化。结论:我们开发了一种稳定的肌肉细胞系,其中包含融合荧光报告蛋白的人SSPN蛋白启动子区域。利用这些报告细胞,我们创建并验证了一种可扩展的、基于细胞的检测方法,该方法能够识别在野生型和肌营养不良蛋白缺乏的肌肉细胞中增加SSPN启动子报告细胞、转录物和蛋白质水平的化合物。
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Development of a high-throughput screen to identify small molecule enhancers of sarcospan for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Background: Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is caused by loss of sarcolemma connection to the extracellular matrix. Transgenic overexpression of the transmembrane protein sarcospan (SSPN) in the DMD mdx mouse model significantly reduces disease pathology by restoring membrane adhesion. Identifying SSPN-based therapies has the potential to benefit patients with DMD and other forms of muscular dystrophies caused by deficits in muscle cell adhesion.

Methods: Standard cloning methods were used to generate C2C12 myoblasts stably transfected with a fluorescence reporter for human SSPN promoter activity. Assay development and screening were performed in a core facility using liquid handlers and imaging systems specialized for use with a 384-well microplate format. Drug-treated cells were analyzed for target gene expression using quantitative PCR and target protein expression using immunoblotting.

Results: We investigated the gene expression profiles of SSPN and its associated proteins during myoblast differentiation into myotubes, revealing an increase in expression after 3 days of differentiation. We created C2C12 muscle cells expressing an EGFP reporter for SSPN promoter activity and observed a comparable increase in reporter levels during differentiation. Assay conditions for high-throughput screening were optimized for a 384-well microplate format and a high-content imager for the visualization of reporter levels. We conducted a screen of 3200 compounds and identified seven hits, which include an overrepresentation of L-type calcium channel antagonists, suggesting that SSPN gene activity is sensitive to calcium. Further validation of a select hit revealed that the calcium channel inhibitor felodipine increased SSPN transcript and protein levels in both wild-type and dystrophin-deficient myotubes, without increasing differentiation.

Conclusions: We developed a stable muscle cell line containing the promoter region of the human SSPN protein fused to a fluorescent reporter. Using the reporter cells, we created and validated a scalable, cell-based assay that is able to identify compounds that increase SSPN promoter reporter, transcript, and protein levels in wild-type and dystrophin-deficient muscle cells.

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来源期刊
Skeletal Muscle
Skeletal Muscle CELL BIOLOGY-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The only open access journal in its field, Skeletal Muscle publishes novel, cutting-edge research and technological advancements that investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the biology of skeletal muscle. Reflecting the breadth of research in this area, the journal welcomes manuscripts about the development, metabolism, the regulation of mass and function, aging, degeneration, dystrophy and regeneration of skeletal muscle, with an emphasis on understanding adult skeletal muscle, its maintenance, and its interactions with non-muscle cell types and regulatory modulators. Main areas of interest include: -differentiation of skeletal muscle- atrophy and hypertrophy of skeletal muscle- aging of skeletal muscle- regeneration and degeneration of skeletal muscle- biology of satellite and satellite-like cells- dystrophic degeneration of skeletal muscle- energy and glucose homeostasis in skeletal muscle- non-dystrophic genetic diseases of skeletal muscle, such as Spinal Muscular Atrophy and myopathies- maintenance of neuromuscular junctions- roles of ryanodine receptors and calcium signaling in skeletal muscle- roles of nuclear receptors in skeletal muscle- roles of GPCRs and GPCR signaling in skeletal muscle- other relevant aspects of skeletal muscle biology. In addition, articles on translational clinical studies that address molecular and cellular mechanisms of skeletal muscle will be published. Case reports are also encouraged for submission. Skeletal Muscle reflects the breadth of research on skeletal muscle and bridges gaps between diverse areas of science for example cardiac cell biology and neurobiology, which share common features with respect to cell differentiation, excitatory membranes, cell-cell communication, and maintenance. Suitable articles are model and mechanism-driven, and apply statistical principles where appropriate; purely descriptive studies are of lesser interest.
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