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Article

Na+ Dysregulation Coupled with Ca2+ Entry through NCX1 Promotes Muscular Dystrophy in Mice

, , , , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 1991-2002 | Received 10 Mar 2014, Accepted 12 Mar 2014, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Unregulated Ca2+ entry is thought to underlie muscular dystrophy. Here, we generated skeletal-muscle-specific transgenic (TG) mice expressing the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger 1 (NCX1) to model its identified augmentation during muscular dystrophy. The NCX1 transgene induced dystrophy-like disease in all hind-limb musculature, as well as exacerbated the muscle disease phenotypes in δ-sarcoglycan (Sgcd−/−), Dysf−/−, and mdx mouse models of muscular dystrophy. Antithetically, muscle-specific deletion of the Slc8a1 (NCX1) gene diminished hind-limb pathology in Sgcd−/− mice. Measured increases in baseline Na+ and Ca2+ in dystrophic muscle fibers of the hind-limb musculature predicts a net Ca2+ influx state due to reverse-mode operation of NCX1, which mediates disease. However, the opposite effect is observed in the diaphragm, where NCX1 overexpression mildly protects from dystrophic disease through a predicted enhancement in forward-mode NCX1 operation that reduces Ca2+ levels. Indeed, Atp1a2+/− (encoding Na+-K+ ATPase α2) mice, which have reduced Na+ clearance rates that would favor NCX1 reverse-mode operation, showed exacerbated disease in the hind limbs of NCX1 TG mice, similar to treatment with the Na+-K+ ATPase inhibitor digoxin. Treatment of Sgcd−/− mice with ranolazine, a broadly acting Na+ channel inhibitor that should increase NCX1 forward-mode operation, reduced muscular pathology.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by grants from the NIH (J.D.M., P.D.A., K.D.P., J.R.L., and J.M.). J.D.M was also supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A.R.B. was supported by a Medical Scientist Training Program training grant at the University of Cincinnati.

We also thank Jeffrey Widrick, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Harvard Medical School Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, for excellent technical assistance.

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