6533b7dbfe1ef96bd1270b29

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Proteomic identification of FHL1 as the protein mutated in human reducing body myopathy

Lynn A. SpruceSteven S. ChinDenny L CottleRoberta BattiniArupa GangulyCaroline SewryHans-hilmar GoebelChristina Anne MitchellYing HuBaijayanta MaitiKevin M. FlaniganMichael M. RosenblattYaqun ZouBelinda S. CowlingMeagan Jane McgrathCarsten G. BönnemannFrancesco MuntoniJoachim SchesslAlexander R. JudkinsJanbernd KirschnerJeffrey A. Golden

subject

Models MolecularProteomicsMolecular Sequence DataMuscle ProteinsBiologyTransfectionProteomicsInclusion bodiesMuscular DiseasesmedicineAmino Acid SequenceLaser capture microdissectionInclusion BodiesIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsCardiac muscleSkeletal muscleGenetic Diseases X-LinkedGeneral MedicineLIM Domain Proteinsmedicine.diseaseCongenital myopathyMolecular biologyFHL1medicine.anatomical_structureMutationMyofibrilResearch Article

description

Reducing body myopathy (RBM) is a rare disorder causing progressive muscular weakness characterized by aggresome-like inclusions in the myofibrils. Identification of genes responsible for RBM by traditional genetic approaches has been impossible due to the frequently sporadic occurrence in affected patients and small family sizes. As an alternative approach to gene identification, we used laser microdissection of intracytoplasmic inclusions identified in patient muscle biopsies, followed by nanoflow liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and proteomic analysis. The most prominent component of the inclusions was the Xq26.3-encoded four and a half LIM domain 1 (FHL1) protein, expressed predominantly in skeletal but also in cardiac muscle. Mutational analysis identified 4 FHL1 mutations in 2 sporadic unrelated females and in 2 families with severely affected boys and less-affected mothers. Transfection of kidney COS-7 and skeletal muscle C2C12 cells with mutant FHL1 induced the formation of aggresome-like inclusions that incorporated both mutant and wild-type FHL1 and trapped other proteins in a dominant-negative manner. Thus, a novel laser micro-dissection/proteomics approach has helped identify both inherited and de novo mutations in FHL1, thereby defining a new X-linked protein aggregation disorder of muscle.

https://research.monash.edu/en/publications/f7531d1a-159b-4d78-b92d-3d6159a0c800