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Pathogenic TNNI1 variants disrupt sarcomere contractility resulting in hypo- and hypercontractile muscle disease.

Authors :
Donkervoort S
van de Locht M
Ronchi D
Reunert J
McLean CA
Zaki M
Orbach R
de Winter JM
Conijn S
Hoomoedt D
Neto OLA
Magri F
Viaene AN
Foley AR
Gorokhova S
Bolduc V
Hu Y
Acquaye N
Napoli L
Park JH
Immadisetty K
Miles LB
Essawi M
McModie S
Ferreira LF
Zanotti S
Neuhaus SB
Medne L
ElBagoury N
Johnson KR
Zhang Y
Laing NG
Davis MR
Bryson-Richardson RJ
Hwee DT
Hartman JJ
Malik FI
Kekenes-Huskey PM
Comi GP
Sharaf-Eldin W
Marquardt T
Ravenscroft G
Bönnemann CG
Ottenheijm CAC
Source :
Science translational medicine [Sci Transl Med] 2024 Apr 03; Vol. 16 (741), pp. eadg2841. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 03.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Troponin I (TnI) regulates thin filament activation and muscle contraction. Two isoforms, TnI-fast ( TNNI2 ) and TnI-slow ( TNNI1 ), are predominantly expressed in fast- and slow-twitch myofibers, respectively. TNNI2 variants are a rare cause of arthrogryposis, whereas TNNI1 variants have not been conclusively established to cause skeletal myopathy. We identified recessive loss-of-function TNNI1 variants as well as dominant gain-of-function TNNI1 variants as a cause of muscle disease, each with distinct physiological consequences and disease mechanisms. We identified three families with biallelic TNNI1 variants (F1: p.R14H/c.190-9G>A, F2 and F3: homozygous p.R14C), resulting in loss of function, manifesting with early-onset progressive muscle weakness and rod formation on histology. We also identified two families with a dominantly acting heterozygous TNNI1 variant (F4: p.R174Q and F5: p.K176del), resulting in gain of function, manifesting with muscle cramping, myalgias, and rod formation in F5. In zebrafish, TnI proteins with either of the missense variants (p.R14H; p.R174Q) incorporated into thin filaments. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested that the loss-of-function p.R14H variant decouples TnI from TnC, which was supported by functional studies showing a reduced force response of sarcomeres to submaximal [Ca <superscript>2+</superscript> ] in patient myofibers. This contractile deficit could be reversed by a slow skeletal muscle troponin activator. In contrast, patient myofibers with the gain-of-function p.R174Q variant showed an increased force to submaximal [Ca <superscript>2+</superscript> ], which was reversed by the small-molecule drug mavacamten. Our findings demonstrated that TNNI1 variants can cause muscle disease with variant-specific pathomechanisms, manifesting as either a hypo- or a hypercontractile phenotype, suggesting rational therapeutic strategies for each mechanism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1946-6242
Volume :
16
Issue :
741
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science translational medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38569017
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.adg2841