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Friedreich cardiomyopathy is a desminopathy

  • Arnulf H. Koeppen
  • , Rahman F. Rafique
  • , Joseph E. Mazurkiewicz
  • , Steven Pelech
  • , Catherine Sutter
  • , Qishan Lin
  • , Jiang Qian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Heart disease is an integral part of Friedreich ataxia (FA) and the most common cause of death in this autosomal recessive disease. The result of the mutation is lack of frataxin, a small mitochondrial protein. The clinical and pathological phenotypes of FA are complex, involving brain, spinal cord, dorsal root ganglia, sensory nerves, heart, and endocrine pancreas. The hypothesis is that frataxin deficiency causes downstream changes in the proteome of the affected tissues, including the heart. A proteomic analysis of heart proteins in FA cardiomyopa-thy by antibody microarray, Western blots, immunohistochemistry, and double-label laser scanning confocal im-munofluorescence microscopy revealed upregulation of desmin and its chaperone protein, αB-crystallin. In normal hearts, these two proteins are co-localized at intercalated discs and Z discs. In FA, desmin and αB-crystallin aggregate, causing chaotic modification of intercalated discs, clustering of mitochondria, and destruction of the contractile apparatus of cardiomyocytes. Western blots of tissue lysates in FA cardiomyopathy reveal a truncated desmin isoprotein that migrates at a lower molecular weight range than wild type desmin. While desmin and αB-crystallin are not mutated in FA, the accumulation of these proteins in FA hearts allows the conclusion that FA cardiomyopathy is a desminopathy akin to desmin myopathy of skeletal muscle.

Original languageEnglish
Article number34
JournalFree Neuropathology
Volume2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 12 2021

Keywords

  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Desmin
  • Desminopathy
  • Friedreich ataxia
  • Proteomics
  • αB-crystallin

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