Abstract

BackgroundDuchenne 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.MethodsStandard 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.ResultsWe 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.ConclusionsWe 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.

Highlights

  • Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is caused by loss of sarcolemma connection to the extracellular matrix

  • To identify a translational SSPNbased therapy, we evaluated in vitro model systems, reporters, and assay conditions to develop a high throughput assay for SSPN enhancers that can be used in 384-well format to efficiently survey large chemical libraries

  • We evaluated the expression of SSPN associated proteins including dystrophin (DMD), utrophin (UTRN), dystroglycan (DAG), α7 integrin (ITGA7), β1D integrin (ITGB1), αsarcoglycan (SGCA), and β-sarcoglycan (SGCB)

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Summary

Introduction

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is caused by loss of sarcolemma connection to the extracellular matrix. 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. Individuals with DMD lack dystrophin protein, which normally stabilizes myofibers by connecting the actin cytoskeleton, through the sarcolemma, to the extracellular matrix (ECM) [2, 3]. Loss of this essential connection leads to contractioninduced damage of the cell membrane and myofiber [4]. 90% of patients over 18 years of age develop dilated cardiomyopathy and respiratory dysfunction, leading to premature death in the third decade of life [1, 7]

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