Abstract

Defective membrane repair can contribute to the progression of muscular dystrophy. Although mutations in caveolin-3 (Cav3) and dysferlin are linked to muscular dystrophy in human patients, the molecular mechanism underlying the functional interplay between Cav3 and dysferlin in membrane repair of muscle physiology and disease has not been fully resolved. We recently discovered that mitsugumin 53 (MG53), a muscle-specific TRIM (Tri-partite motif) family protein (TRIM72), contributes to intracellular vesicle trafficking and is an essential component of the membrane repair machinery in striated muscle. Here we show that MG53 interacts with dysferlin and Cav3 to regulate membrane repair in skeletal muscle. MG53 mediates active trafficking of intracellular vesicles to the sarcolemma and is required for movement of dysferlin to sites of cell injury during repair patch formation. Mutations in Cav3 (P104L, R26Q) that cause retention of Cav3 in Golgi apparatus result in aberrant localization of MG53 and dysferlin in a dominant-negative fashion, leading to defective membrane repair. Our data reveal that a molecular complex formed by MG53, dysferlin, and Cav3 is essential for repair of muscle membrane damage and also provide a therapeutic target for treatment of muscular and cardiovascular diseases that are linked to compromised membrane repair.

Highlights

  • Lar vesicles to injury sites [4, 5]

  • mitsugumin 53 (MG53) Ablation and P104L-Cav3 Overexpression Produce Defective Membrane Repair in Skeletal Muscle—To test whether defective membrane repair may underlie the progression of muscular dystrophy related to mutations in Cav3, we examined the membrane repair capacity of transgenic mice that express P104L-Cav3 [22, 26]

  • MG53 is a TRIM family protein expressed exclusively in striated muscle, which functions as a sensor of oxidation to nucleate the assembly of the acute membrane repair machinery in skeletal muscle [17]

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Summary

Introduction

Lar vesicles to injury sites [4, 5]. One protein that has been linked to membrane repair in skeletal muscle is dysferlin [6, 7], which is thought to fuse intracellular vesicles to patch the damaged membrane and restore sarcolemmal integrity following muscle injury. Skeletal muscle from the P104L-Cav3 mice displays defective membrane repair following UV laser-induced injury of the sarcolemma (Fig. 1A), similar to those observed with the dysferlinϪ/Ϫ [7] and mg53Ϫ/Ϫ

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