Muscle-specific SMN reduction reveals motor neuron–independent disease in spinal muscular atrophy models

Jeong-Ki Kim(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Narendra Nath Jha(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Zhihua Feng(University of Southern California), Michelle R. Faleiro(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Claudia A. Chiriboga(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Lan Wei‐LaPierre(University of Rochester Medical Center), Robert T. Dirksen(University of Rochester Medical Center), Chien‐Ping Ko(University of Southern California), Umrao R. Monani(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
February 9, 2020
Cited by 99Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Paucity of the survival motor neuron (SMN) protein triggers the oft-fatal infantile-onset motor neuron disorder, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Augmenting the protein is one means of treating SMA and recently led to FDA approval of an intrathecally delivered SMN-enhancing oligonucleotide currently in use. Notwithstanding the advent of this and other therapies for SMA, it is unclear whether the paralysis associated with the disease derives solely from dysfunctional motor neurons that may be efficiently targeted by restricted delivery of SMN-enhancing agents to the nervous system, or stems from broader defects of the motor unit, arguing for systemic SMN repletion. We investigated the disease-contributing effects of low SMN in one relevant peripheral organ - skeletal muscle - by selectively depleting the protein in only this tissue. We found that muscle deprived of SMN was profoundly damaged. Although a disease phenotype was not immediately obvious, persistent low levels of the protein eventually resulted in muscle fiber defects, neuromuscular junction abnormalities, compromised motor performance, and premature death. Importantly, restoring SMN after the onset of muscle pathology reversed disease. Our results provide the most compelling evidence yet for a direct contributing role of muscle in SMA and argue that an optimal therapy for the disease must be designed to treat this aspect of the dysfunctional motor unit.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis