[HTML][HTML] Comprehensive expression analysis of FSHD candidate genes at the mRNA and protein level

R Klooster, K Straasheijm, B Shah, J Sowden… - European Journal of …, 2009 - nature.com
R Klooster, K Straasheijm, B Shah, J Sowden, R Frants, C Thornton, R Tawil…
European Journal of Human Genetics, 2009nature.com
In facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) the majority of patients carry a D4Z4
macrosatellite repeat contraction in the subtelomere of chromosome 4q. Several disease
mechanisms have been proposed to explain how repeat contraction causes muscular
dystrophy. All proposed mechanisms foresee a change from a closed to a more open
chromatin structure followed by loss of control over expression of genes in or proximal to
D4Z4. Initially, a distance and residual repeat size-dependent upregulation of the candidate …
Abstract
In facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) the majority of patients carry a D4Z4 macrosatellite repeat contraction in the subtelomere of chromosome 4q. Several disease mechanisms have been proposed to explain how repeat contraction causes muscular dystrophy. All proposed mechanisms foresee a change from a closed to a more open chromatin structure followed by loss of control over expression of genes in or proximal to D4Z4. Initially, a distance and residual repeat size-dependent upregulation of the candidate genes FRG2, FRG1 and ANT1 was observed, but most successive expression studies failed to support transcriptional upregulation of 4qter genes. Moreover, chromatin studies do not provide evidence for a cis-spreading mechanism operating at 4qter in FSHD. In part, this inconsistency may be explained by differences in the techniques used, and the use of RNA samples obtained from different muscle groups. The aim of this study is to comprehensively and uniformly study the expression of the FSHD candidate genes FRG1, FRG2, CRYM, ANT1, ALP, PITX1 and LRP2BP at the RNA and protein level in identically processed primary myoblasts, myotubes and quadriceps muscle. Expression was compared between samples obtained from FSHD patients and normal controls with samples from myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients as disease controls. No consistent changes in RNA or protein expression levels were observed between the samples. The one exception was a selective increase in FRG2 mRNA expression in FSHD myotubes. This study provides further evidence that there is no demonstrable consistent, large magnitude, overexpression of any of the FSHD candidate genes.
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