Bioengineered Model of Human LGMD2B Skeletal Muscle Reveals Roles of Intracellular Calcium Overload in Contractile and Metabolic Dysfunction in Dysferlinopathy

Author:

Khodabukus Alastair1ORCID,Prabhu Neel K.1,Roberts Taylor1,Buldo Meghan1,Detwiler Amber1,Fralish Zachary D.1,Kondash Megan E.1,Truskey George A.1,Koves Timothy R.2,Bursac Nenad1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Duke University Durham NC 27708 USA

2. Duke Molecular Physiology Institute Duke University Durham NC 27708 USA

Abstract

AbstractDysferlin is a multi‐functional protein that regulates membrane resealing, calcium homeostasis, and lipid metabolism in skeletal muscle. Genetic loss of dysferlin results in limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2B/2R (LGMD2B/2R) and other dysferlinopathies – rare untreatable muscle diseases that lead to permanent loss of ambulation in humans. The mild disease severity in dysferlin‐deficient mice and diverse genotype‐phenotype relationships in LGMD2B patients have prompted the development of new in vitro models for personalized studies of dysferlinopathy. Here the first 3‐D tissue‐engineered hiPSC‐derived skeletal muscle (“myobundle”) model of LGMD2B is described that exhibits compromised contractile function, calcium‐handling, and membrane repair, and transcriptomic changes indicative of impaired oxidative metabolism and mitochondrial dysfunction. In response to the fatty acid (FA) challenge, LGMD2B myobundles display mitochondrial deficits and intracellular lipid droplet (LD) accumulation. Treatment with the ryanodine receptor (RyR) inhibitor dantrolene or the dissociative glucocorticoid vamorolone restores LGMD2B contractility, improves membrane repair, and reduces LD accumulation. Lastly, it is demonstrated that chemically induced chronic RyR leak in healthy myobundles phenocopies LGMD2B contractile and metabolic deficit, but not the loss of membrane repair capacity. Together, these results implicate intramyocellular Ca2+ leak as a critical driver of dysferlinopathic phenotype and validate the myobundle system as a platform to study LGMD2B pathogenesis.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Jain Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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