(Press-News.org) HOUSTON (July 29, 3013) – When you sprint, the "fast" muscle fibers give you that winning kick. In a marathon or just day-to-day activity, however, the "slow," or type 1 fibers, keep you going for hours.
In people with myotonic dystrophy, the second most common form of muscular dystrophy and the one most likely to occur in adults, these slow or type 1 fibers do not work well, wasting away as the genetic disorder takes its grim toll. In a report that appears online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Dr. Thomas A. Cooper, professor of pathology & immunology at Baylor College of Medicine, and Dr. Zhihua Gao, a postdoctoral associate at BCM, showed how an aberrant alternative splicing program changes the form of an enzyme (pyruvate kinase of PKM) involved in the fundamental metabolism of these muscle cells, leaving them unable to sustain exercise. The enzyme reverts to the embryonic form (PKM2), which changes its activity in the cell.
Alternative splicing is one of the secrets as to how the estimated 25,000 human genes code for the 100,000 or more proteins important to the functioning of the human body. For one gene to make different proteins, it has to alter the genetic message, choosing which coding parts of the gene called exons are included in the protein "recipe" used by the cell's protein-making machinery.
"In the case of PKM2, this enzyme represents a shift back to the fetal splicing pattern," said Cooper. "What was striking was that if you look at the histology (the tissues seen at a microscopic level) of the skeletal muscle, only the slow fiber types – the ones affected in myotonic dystrophy – have this splicing event switch." The slow fibers are those most affected in myotonic dystrophy.
"We don't know what it is doing to the metabolism, but it seems to be pushing it in the opposite direction from what slow fibers do," said Cooper. "This is related to the loss of slow fibers in myotonic dystrophy."
To figure out how this happens, Cooper and his colleagues used antisense oligonucleotides (snippets of genetic material designed to target specific areas of a gene) to bind to the precursor RNA (genetic material that carries the code for a protein) for PKM, and thus force it in the other direction – to the embryonic form.
"Doing this, we showed there could be a change in metabolism in myotonic dystrophy and we showed it in the whole animal," said Cooper.
Myotonic dystrophy occurs when the nucleotides CTG (cytosine, thymine, guanine) repeat an abnormal number of times. When the CTG in the DNA is transcribed into CUG in RNA, the resulting aberrant protein is toxic and disrupts the activity of RNA factors (MBNL1 AND CELF1), which are two RNA splicing factors. The resultant splicing changes somehow drive the skeletal and heart muscle wasting seen in the disease.
"To my knowledge, this is the first time anyone has looked at this alternative splicing event and associated it with a disease other than cancer," said Cooper. "The muscle wasting in this disease could be due to an imbalance of metabolism."
###
Funding for this work came from the Muscular Dystrophy Association and the National Institutes of Health (Grants R01AR45653, R01HL045565, R01AR060733).
For more information on research at Baylor College of Medicine, please go to http://www.bcm.edu/fromthelab.
Aberrant splicing saps the strength of 'slow' muscle fibers
2013-07-30
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Decision aids reduce men's conflict about PSA screening, but don't change their decisions
2013-07-30
WASHINGTON – Men who decide to be screened for prostate cancer and those who forgo PSA screening stick with their decisions after receiving materials explaining the risks and benefits of the test. The decision aids greatly increased their knowledge about screening and reduced their conflict about what to do, but did not have an impact on their screening decision when measured a year later.
That's the finding of a new study published today in JAMA Internal Medicine that examined both web-based and printed tools aimed at helping men make informed decisions about PSA testing.
In ...
Playing college football linked with high blood pressure risk
2013-07-30
College football players, especially linemen, may develop high blood pressure over the course of their first season, according to a small study in the American Heart Association's journal Circulation.
Researchers documented higher blood pressure levels among 113 first-year college players. Only one player had already been diagnosed with hypertension before the season and 27 percent had a family history of hypertension. At post-season, researchers noted:
47 percent of players were considered pre-hypertensive, while
14 percent had stage 1 hypertension.
While previous ...
Treatment for back pain varies despite published clinical guidelines
2013-07-30
Management of back pain appears to be variable, despite numerous published clinical guidelines, according to a report published by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.
Spinal symptoms are among the most common reasons patients visit a physician and more than 10 percent of visits to primary care physicians relate to back and neck pain, the authors write in the study background.
John N. Mafi, M.D., of Harvard Medical School, Boston, and colleagues used nationally representative data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and the National Hospital ...
Adolescent kidney transplant recipients appear to be at higher risk of transplant failure
2013-07-30
Patients who received their first kidney transplant at ages 14 to 16 years appear to be at increased risk for transplant failure, with black adolescents having a disproportionately higher risk of graft failure, according to a report published by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.
Existing medical literature does not adequately describe the risks of graft failure among kidney transplant recipients by age. Organ losses by adolescents are partly due to physiologic or immunologic changes with age but psychological and sociological factors play a role, especially ...
Decision aids associated with increase in informed decision making about prostate cancer screening
2013-07-30
Both web-based and print-based decision aids appear to improve patients' informed decision making about prostate cancer screening up to 13 months later, but does not appear to affect actual screening rates, according to a study by Kathryn L. Taylor, Ph.D., of Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., and colleagues.
A total of 1,893 men participated in the study, with 628 men randomly given a print-decision aid, 625 men used a web-based interactive decision aid, and 626 men received usual care. Researchers measured the participants' prostate cancer knowledge, decisional ...
Breastfeeding duration appears associated with intelligence later in life
2013-07-30
Breastfeeding longer is associated with better receptive language at 3 years of age and verbal and nonverbal intelligence at age 7 years, according to a study published by JAMA Pediatrics, a JAMA Network publication.
Evidence supports the relationship between breastfeeding and health benefits in infancy, but the extent to which breastfeeding leads to better cognitive development is less certain, according to the study background.
Mandy B. Belfort, M.D., M.P.H., of Boston Children's Hospital, and colleagues examined the relationships of breastfeeding duration and exclusivity ...
Glucose intolerance, diabetes or insulin resistance not linked with pathological features of AD
2013-07-30
Glucose intolerance or insulin resistance do not appear to be associated with pathological features of Alzheimer disease (AD) or detection of the accumulation of the brain protein β-amyloid (Αβ), according to a report published by JAMA Neurology, a JAMA Network publication.
Glucose intolerance and diabetes mellitus have been proposed as risk factors for the development of AD, but evidence of this has not been consistent, the study background notes.
Madhav Thambisetty, M.D., Ph.D., of the National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, and colleagues investigated ...
Physicians should counsel patients about sex life after cardiac event
2013-07-30
Healthcare professionals are urged to counsel heart and stroke patients on how to resume a healthy sex life, according to a joint statement published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation and the European Heart Journal. It is the first scientific statement to offer detailed guidance for patients.
"Patients are anxious and often afraid sex will trigger another cardiac event – but the topic sometimes gets passed over because of embarrassment or discomfort," said Elaine Steinke, A.P.R.N., Ph.D., lead author of the statement and professor of nursing at Wichita ...
BIDMC study suggests worsening trends in back pain management
2013-07-30
BOSTON – Patient care could be enhanced and the health care system could see significant cost savings if health care professionals followed published clinical guidelines to manage and treat back pain, according to researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and published in the July 29 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine.
"Back pain treatment is costly and frequently includes overuse of treatments that are not supported by clinical guidelines, and that don't impact outcomes," says lead author John N. Mafi, MD, a fellow in the Division of General Medicine and Primary ...
NIH researchers identify therapy that may curb kidney deterioration in patients with rare disorder
2013-07-30
A team led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health has overcome a major biological hurdle in an effort to find improved treatments for patients with a rare disease called methylmalonic acidemia (MMA). Using genetically engineered mice created for their studies, the team identified a set of biomarkers of kidney damage—a hallmark of the disorder—and demonstrated that antioxidant therapy protected kidney function in the mice.
Researchers at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI), part of NIH, validated the same biomarkers in 46 patients with MMA ...