Mutations in repeating structural motifs of tropomyosin cause gain of function in skeletal muscle myopathy patients

S. Marston, M. Memo, A. Messer, M. Papadaki, Kristen Nowak, Elyshia Mcnamara, Royston Ong, M. El-Mezgueldi, X. Li, W. Lehman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

72 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The congenital myopathies include a wide spectrum of clinically, histologically and genetically variable neuromuscular disorders many of which are caused by mutations in genes for sarcomeric proteins. Some congenital myopathy patients have a hypercontractile phenotype. Recent functional studies demonstrated that ACTA1 K326N and TPM2 δK7 mutations were associated with hypercontractility that could be explained by increased myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity. A recent structure of the complex of actin and tropomyosin in the relaxed state showed that both these mutations are located in the actin-tropomyosin interface. Tropomyosin is an elongated molecule with a 7-fold repeated motif of around 40 amino acids corresponding to the 7 actin monomers it interacts with. Actin binds to tropomyosin electrostatically at two points, through Asp25 and through a cluster of amino acids that includes Lys326, mutated in the gain-of-function mutation. Asp25 interacts with tropomyosin K6, next to K7 that was mutated in the other gain-of-function mutation. We identified four tropomyosin motifs interacting with Asp25 (K6-K7, K48-K49, R90-R91 and R167-K168) and three E-E/D-K/R motifs interacting with Lys326 (E139, E181 and E218), and we predicted that the known skeletal myopathy mutations δK7, δK49, R91G, δE139, K168E and E181K would cause a gain of function. Tests by an in vitro motility assay confirmed that these mutations increased Ca2+ sensitivity, while mutations not in these motifs (R167H, R244G) decreased Ca2+ sensitivity. The work reported here explains the molecular mechanism for 6 out of 49 known disease-causing mutations in the TPM2 and TPM3 genes, derived from structural data of the actin-tropomyosin interface. © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4978-4987
JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
Volume22
Issue number24
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2013

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