Dysregulation of sarcomere stabilizing proteins cause muscle atrophy and weakness during cancer cachexia
University Of Florida, Gainesville FL
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Abstract
? DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Cachexia is characterized by progressive skeletal muscle and body weight loss and affects up to 80% of cancer patients. This loss of muscle mass contributes to significant muscle weakness and diminished physical function and is associated with reduced tolerance to chemotherapy and increased complications from surgical/radiotherapeutic treatments. Consequently, cachexia decreases both quality of life and survival time in cancer patients and cachexia itself is responsible for up to 30% of all cancer-related deaths. Interestingly muscles from preclinical models of cancer cachexia as well as cachectic human cancer patients show disruptions in sarcomere and myofiber membrane integrity despite the lack of an injury stimulus, and there is speculation that these disruptions may initiate catabolic processes which lead to the muscle atrophy and weakness. Unpublished and preliminary data from our lab has identified that Kyphoscoliosis peptidase (Ky), which is essential to the structural integrity of the sarcomeric Z-disk, and Myocilin (Myoc), which is important to the sarcolemmal dystrophin associated protein complex (DAPC), are highly downregulated at the mRNA and protein level at time points which precede and parallel muscle atrophy and weakness during tumor progression. Moreover, preliminary data show that overexpression of Ky in the muscles of tumor bearing mice inhibits muscle fiber atrophy. These observations support our first hypothesis that the downregulation of Ky and Myoc are causative to the loss of muscle structure leading to muscle wasting and weakness during the progression of cancer cachexia. Unpublished bioinformatics analyses of the -1kb to +1kb proximal promoters of genes significantly downregulated in skeletal muscle of C26 tumor-bearing mice revealed a conserved consensus binding motif for myocyte enhancing factor-2 (MEF2) among the top most commonly shared motifs. Moreover, both the Ky and Myoc gene promoters contain conserved MEF2 binding motifs. This observation, coupled with the findings that MEF2 protein c (MEF2c) is decreased at the mRNA and protein level in tumor bearing mice, supports our second hypothesis that loss of MEF2c transcriptional activity in skeletal muscle of tumor-bearing hosts is causative in the downregulation of Ky and Myoc, and initiates disruptions in muscle fiber integrity and muscle wasting. Thus, our two specific aims are: Specific Aim 1: To test the hypothesis that the downregulation of Kyphoscoliosis peptidase (Ky) and Myocilin (Myoc) play causative roles in the cancer-induced loss of muscle fiber integrity and the initiation of muscle wasting. Specific Aim 2: To test the hypothesis that loss of MEF2c transcriptional activity is causative in the cancer- induced downregulation of Ky and Myoc and initiates muscle wasting. The results of these studies will provide new insight into transcriptional mechanisms involving protein downregulation which initiate cancer-induced muscle wasting and weakness, opening up new avenues for therapeutic interventions.
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