Polyglutamine-expanded androgen receptor disrupts muscle triad, calcium dynamics and the excitation-contraction coupling gene expression program

Author:

Chivet M,Marchioretti C,Pirazzini M,Piol D,Scaramuzzino C,Polanco JM,Nath S,Zuccaro E,Nogara L,Canato M,Marcucci L,Parodi S,Romanello V,Armani A,D’Antonio M,Sambataro F,Dassi E,Pegoraro E,Sorarù G,Rinaldi C,Lieberman AP,Blaauw B,Sandri M,Basso M,Pennuto MORCID

Abstract

AbstractSpinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is caused by polyglutamine (polyQ) expansions in the androgen receptor (AR) gene. Although clinical and experimental evidence highlight a primary role for skeletal muscle in the onset, progression, and outcome of disease, the pathophysiological and molecular processes underlying SBMA muscle atrophy are poorly understood. Here we show that polyQ-expanded AR alters intrinsic muscle force generation before denervation. Reduced muscle force was associated with a switch in fiber-type composition, disrupted muscle striation, altered calcium (Ca++) dynamics in response to muscle contraction, and aberrant expression of excitation-contraction coupling (ECC) machinery genes in transgenic, knock-in and inducible SBMA mice and patients. Importantly, treatment to suppress polyQ-expanded AR toxicity restored ECC gene expression back to normal. Suppression of AR activation by surgical castration elicited similar ECC gene expression changes in normal mice, suggesting that AR regulates the expression of these genes in physiological conditions. Bioinformatic analysis revealed the presence of androgen-responsive elements on several genes involved in muscle function and homeostasis, and experimental evidence showed AR-dependent regulation of expression and promoter occupancy of the most up-regulated gene from transcriptomic analysis in SBMA muscle, i.e. sarcolipin, a key ECC gene. These observations reveal an unpredicted role for AR in the regulation of expression of genes involved in muscle contraction and Ca++ dynamics, a level of muscle function regulation that is disrupted in SBMA muscle, yet restored by pharmacologic treatment.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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