Abstract
Nebulin is a very large protein required for assembly of the contractile machinery in muscle. Mutations in the nebulin gene NEB are a common cause of nemaline myopathy. Nebulin mRNA is alternatively-spliced so that each mRNA contains either exon 143 or exon 144. We have produced monoclonal antibodies specific for the regions of nebulin encoded by these two exons, enabling analysis of expression of isoforms at the protein level for the first time. All antibodies recognized a protein of the expected size (600–900 kD) and stained cross-striations of sarcomeres in muscle sections. Expression of exon 143 is developmentally-regulated since newly-formed myotubes in cell culture expressed nebulin with exon 144 only; this was confirmed at the mRNA level by qPCR. In fetal muscle, nebulin with exon 143 was expressed in some myotubes by 12-weeks of gestation and strongly-expressed in most myotubes by 17-weeks. In mature human muscle, the exon 144 antibody stained all fibres, but the exon 143 antibody staining varied from very strong in some fibres to almost-undetectable in other fibres. The results show that nebulin containing exon 144 is the default isoform early in myogenesis, while regulated expression of nebulin containing exon 143 occurs at later stages of muscle development.
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Introduction
Nebulin is a large protein expressed mainly in the skeletal muscle sarcomere1,2,3. It has a modular structure, with more than 200 simple repeats, each binding to actin along the length of the thin filament1,2. The most important roles of nebulin are to act as a thin filament stabiliser and in defining Z-disc width4,5,6,7. Although all known exons in the NEB gene could theoretically encode a protein of 8,525 amino-acids8, numerous alternative splicing events typically result in smaller proteins in the range 600–900 kD9,10. Whereas most of these alternative splicing events simply remove exons from the nebulin mRNAs, all nebulin mRNAs contain either exon 143 or exon 144 but never both2. In the central region of nebulin, the 200+ simple repeats are further organised into 26 different super-repeats. The mutually exclusive exons 143 and 144 are found in S21 and define S21a and S21b respectively1,2.
The amino-acid sequence of nebulin is highly conserved among species. The sequence encoded by exon 143 shows complete homology between mouse, rat, and human. However, S21a and S21b differ in charge and hydrophobicity2, suggesting different functional roles for the alternative isoforms. The S21 super-repeat is just outside the Z-disc anchorage region. It contains the binding site for KLHL40, a muscle-specific Kelch protein that also binds leiomodin-3 (LMOD3) and stabilizes thin filament assembly3,11. Mutations in several proteins, including nebulin, KLHL4011 and LMOD312, can cause nemaline myopathy, a congenital disorder of muscle characterized by the presence of nemaline bodies, which are aggregates of thin filament proteins13,14. Mutations in two other Kelch genes, those for KLHL41 and KBTBD13, also cause forms of nemaline myopathy15.
We have produced eleven monoclonal antibodies for the S21 region, including three that are specific for nebulin protein encoded by exon 143 or exon 144. For the first time, these new antibodies have enabled a study of the two nebulin isoforms during human muscle development at the protein level. Immunolocalization has enabled us to follow nebulin isoform expression in different cell and fibre types at several stages of human muscle development, from early myogenesis in cell culture, through fetal stages, to mature skeletal muscle. We suggest that S21a (nebulin with exon 143) has functions that are required at later stages of muscle development.
Results
New monoclonal antibodies confirm the existence of nebulin isoforms at the protein level.
BALB/c mice were immunised with recombinant fragments of nebulin encoded by exons 138–143 or 138-(143)144. The fragments were produced from pET plasmids as fusion proteins with thioredoxin. The use of fragments larger than exons 143 or 144 alone was employed to increase their immunogenicity, since the amino-acid sequence of exon 143 is identical in man and mouse.
Our initial hybridoma screening was based on ELISA with the two fragments, with the aim of selecting mAbs that recognised 138–143, but not 138–144, and vice-versa. The first attempt produced only mAbs that were directed against exons 138–142 common to both fragments (Table 1A).
It was possible to map the epitopes recognised by 3 of these mAbs using phage-displayed peptide libraries and they were binding to regions encoded by exon 140 (Fig. 1). Other mAbs did not select peptides from the library and could not be mapped in this way. This panel of 6 mAbs all recognised a band on western blots of human muscle consistent with the expected size of nebulin (>427 kD dystrophin) (Fig. 2A) and stained sarcomeric bands in longitudinal skeletal muscle sections (Fig. 3A). To produce the desired exon 143/144 mAbs, we screened with new fusion proteins expressing exon 143 only or exon 144 only and produced two mAbs specific for exon 143 (NEB-3F4 and NEB-6E6) and one mAb specific for exon 144 (NEB-9H1) (Table 1B). The two exon 143 mAbs stained sarcomeric cross-striations in only a subset of fibres and with variable intensity, whereas the exon 144 mAb stained the striations in all fibres with little variation in intensity (Fig. 3B). All three mAbs stained a similar nebulin band on western blots of normal adult human muscle (Fig. 2B). Lower Mr bands on the blot are likely degradation products of nebulin. Figure 2C shows that the largest nebulin band is similar in size to nesprin-2 (792 kD) or slightly smaller. We have labelled it “800 kD” as an approximation, since it is clearly smaller than the predicted “unspliced” size (980 kD) of the largest, full-length nebulin sequence8, as expected9,10.
Early myotubes in cell culture have only nebulin with exon 144, but myotubes in fetal muscle at 12 weeks of gestation also express nebulin with exon 143
Cultures of human myotubes from immortalised clonal cell lines were examined 4 days after induction of myoblast fusion by removal of serum from the culture medium. At this stage, over 60% of nuclei are within multinucleate myotubes, levels of muscle-specific creatine kinase (M-CK) are high and myosins (fast, slow and neonatal) are already present (data not shown). Nebulin was barely detectable with exon 143 mAbs, but the exon 144 and exon 140 mAb showed a uniform staining of the myotube cytoplasm (Fig. 4). The same result was obtained with two different cell lines, from donors aged 5 days or 53 years.
qPCR confirmed that only 1% of nebulin mRNAs in myotube cultures had exon 143, whereas in adult muscle up to two-thirds of the mRNA had exon 143 (Table 2). Levels of nebulin mRNA containing exon 143 are much higher in fetal muscle, and higher again in adult muscle, compared with cultured myotubes (Table 2). All myotubes in sections of human fetal muscle at 12 weeks gestation expressed developmental myosin strongly while fast myosin was expressed less strongly and more variably (Fig. 5A). Similarly, S21b nebulin (exon 144) was found in all fibres but with only a little variability. Staining fetal muscle of 12 weeks gestation for S21a nebulin (exon 143) gave a pattern similar to fast myosin staining; thus, many of the larger myotubes are less strongly-stained for both S21a and fast myosin than smaller myotubes (Fig. 5A). The larger ones may be primary myotubes and the smaller ones may be the secondary myotubes that appear a little later in human myogenesis.
By 17 weeks of fetal development, staining for S21a (exon 143) of the larger myotubes was stronger and the differences between 143 and 144 were less evident (Fig. 5B). Some very small myotubes expressing fast and fetal myosin are evident with mAb NEB-9H1 (exon 144) but not with mAb NEB-3F4 (exon 143) (Fig. 5B). These myotubes may be a subset of secondary myotubes sometimes referred to as tertiary myotubes16. From the results with these two fetal muscle samples, it seems that nebulin with exon 143 has appeared by 12 weeks gestation and may have increased further by 17 weeks.
The results suggest that the first nebulin produced during myogenesis contains only S21b (exon 144) super-repeat and that alternative splicing to produce additional nebulin molecules with the S21a (exon 143) super-repeat occurs at later stages of muscle differentiation and development.
In mature human quadriceps muscle, fibres expressing fast myosin usually express S21a nebulin (exon 143)
We tried to determine whether the variable expression of exon 143 between adjacent muscle fibres seen in Fig. 3 is related to any other property that shows this “fibre-typing” effect, the best known being the mixture, in various proportions, of fast-twitch and slow-twitch fibres of which most muscles are comprised. Serial sections of a human muscle were stained with mAbs against nebulin (143 or 144) or myosin (fast or slow). We did not attempt to distinguish between IIA and IIX fast myosin17. In Fig. 6, some of the fibres (40 out of 100 counted) are numbered to identify the same fibre in each of the serial sections. Two additional quadriceps biopsies from two different subjects were analysed in the same way and Table 3 shows the results from these 3 experiments (the biopsy for Fig. 6 is “Quads 3” in Table 3). The great majority (93.3%) of fibres expressing fast myosin were stained by NEB-3F4 mAb (exon 143), but 24.1% of the fibres staining for slow myosin were also stained by NEB-3F4 mAb. Thus, fast fibres usually express S21a nebulin (exon 143) while slow fibres may express either S21a or S21b.
Even with this very small sample number (N = 3), the association between fast myosin and exon 143 expression was significant [p < 0.05] (Mean % of fast fibres that are exon 143+ = 93.3%; 95% CI range 66.7–100%), but no significant association between slow fibres and absence of exon 143 expression could be demonstrated at this probability level (Mean % of slow fibres that are exon 143+ = 24.1%; 95% CI range 6.3–64.5% [p > 0.05]).
Discussion
This study has proven, for the first time at the protein level, the existence of two alternatively-spliced nebulins, isoforms S21a with exon 143 and S21b with exon 144, previously known from mRNA studies only. Although each single nebulin mRNA contains either exon 143 or exon 144, and never both2, we have shown that all human multinucleate muscle fibres examined contain nebulin isoform S21b (exon 144) while some of them co-express nebulin S21a (exon 143). Because of the multinuclearity of the myofibres, it is not possible to say whether both alternative splicings occur within a single myofibre nucleus, or whether some myofibre nuclei express only exon 143 and others only exon 144. The nebulin protein sequence encoded by exon 143 is highly-conserved across species, suggesting that it may have a special function, such as specific interaction with another protein. For example, the binding site for KLHL40 is within S21, but its precise location is not known11. The existence in adult muscle of fibres containing only S21b (with exon 144) shows that the inferred special function of S21a is not required in all fibres. The expression of S21a in addition to S21b in some fibres may explain may explain why “fibre-typing” effects were observed in previous studies when sections were labelled with polyclonal pan-nebulin antibodies18.
Cultured myotubes in vitro contained only nebulin with exon 144 (Fig. 4), but by the second trimester of fetal development in vivo, most myotubes contained both nebulins (Fig. 5), suggesting developmental regulation of some kind. At 12 weeks gestation, the smaller fetal myotubes tended to be stained more strongly for both exon 143 and fast myosin than the larger, primary, fetal myotubes (Fig. 5A). However, at 17 weeks gestation, some very small myotubes with fast myosin (possible tertiary myotubes16) were more strongly stained with the exon 144 mAb (Fig. 5B). These observations, together with variation between individual adult fibres (Fig. 6), shows that expression of S21a (exon 143) is not the result of a simple or irreversible developmental switch. Splicing of primary RNA transcripts into mRNAs is determined by cis-acting sequences in adjacent introns and by trans-acting factors (proteins or micro-RNAs) which may themselves be regulated by epigenetic changes during development. It remains to be determined whether the trans-acting factors affecting S21a expression are independently-regulated or linked to a specific gene-switching event during muscle development.
This first study at the protein level differs from earlier mRNA studies, since we are sampling only a small area of a human muscle section whereas mRNA was extracted from whole muscles. The latter gives a broader picture, but the former enables a direct appraisal of the role of fibre-types. Whereas mRNA studies showed that alternative splicing is not determined by the average fast/slow composition of muscle19, our ability to study splicing in individual fibres using antibodies has shown that it does depend to some extent on fibre-type, though it may not be directly-related to myosin isoform expression. The present human studies confirm and extend the work of Donner et al.19 on alternative splicing of mouse nebulin exons 127 and 128 (murine equivalent of human exons 143 and 144) in different mouse muscles at different ages up to 6 weeks (near-adult in the mouse) by extracting RNA from whole mouse muscles. This mouse study found considerable differences between different muscles; thus, many muscles, including quadriceps and gastrocnemius, had mainly exon 128 by 6-weeks, though they expressed a lot of exon 127 at earlier stages, while some muscles (longus capitis) expressed almost exclusively exon 127 and others (diaphragm, masseter) expressed almost exclusively exon 128 at all ages. In human quadriceps, most fast fibres expressed exon 143 and most slow fibres did not. It will be necessary to study other human muscles in order to determine whether alternative splicing varies with human muscle type, as it does between mouse muscles. Some other alternative splicings of human nebulin mRNA have been shown to occur only in soleus muscle, and not in other muscle types9, suggesting that post-transcriptional effects on nebulin expression may often be muscle-type-specific.
Future studies of biopsies from patients with neuromuscular disorders, including nemaline myopathy, and of a variety of muscles in addition to quadriceps, will be necessary to clarify the effects of muscle-type and disease state.
Materials and Methods
Ethical Approvals
The project was approved by the RJAH Hospital Research Committee. Animal procedures for mouse monoclonal antibody production were carried out under UK Home Office Licence and approved by Keele University Animal Welfare and Ethical Review Body. All human tissue studies complied with the UK Human Tissue Act (2006). Use of donor muscle tissue from routine orthopaedic surgery with informed consent was approved by the UK NHS Review Body (NRES North West No 11/NW/0875). Other human muscle samples were obtained from the MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Disease Biobank, London. Parental or legal guardian informed consent was obtained for participants under the age of 16 years.
Production of recombinant immunogens
The DNA fragments containing nebulin exons 138–143 or 138–144 were obtained from thigh muscle RNA by reverse transcription PCR, and cloned into pET32a-vector20. Plasmid constructs containing the correct insert were identified by Sanger sequencing. For screening, the cDNA fragments containing exon 143 or exon 144 alone, obtained from the pET32a construct by PCR, were cloned into pGEX4T-1 vector for expression as GST fusion proteins. All constructs were transformed into E. coli BL21 (DE3) and the expression was induced with IPTG (0.5 mM final concentration).
Production of monoclonal antibodies
Monoclonal antibody production was performed as previously described21. Spleen cells from hyper-immune BALB/c mice were fused with the Sp2/O mouse myeloma cell line using PEG1500 and plated in 960 wells of microtitre plates. After 10 days, the hybridomas were screened by ELISA, western blot and immunocytochemistry. Positive wells were cloned twice by limiting dilution.
Phage-displayed Random Peptide Library
Epitope mapping with a phage-displayed random 15-mer library was carried out according to a detailed protocol22. Briefly, antibody coated onto plastic dishes was used to select phage particles from a 15-mer peptide library in phage f88–4, maintained in the K91Kan strain of E. coli and generously supplied by G.P. Smith (University of Missouri). After 2–3 rounds of selection, individual phage-infected bacterial colonies positive for the antibody target on western blots were isolated and the expressed peptide sequence was identified by sequencing the phage DNA with a suitable primer (5′-AGTAGCAGAAGCCTGAAGA-3′).
Muscle cell culture
Clonal myoblast cell lines, immortalized by transduction with human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and cyclin-dependent kinase-4 (Cdk4)23, were provided by Dr V. Mouly, Institut de Myologie, Paris. They were cultured in skeletal cell growth medium (Cat No: C-23060; PromoCell GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany) containing supplement mix (Cat No: C-39365; PromoCell) with 20% Fetal Bovine Serum (Cat No: 10270; Gibco, ThermoFisher, Paisley, UK). Differentiation was induced at 80% confluency by washing the adherent myoblasts in medium lacking serum and then culturing in DMEM (Cat No: 31966-021; Gibco, ThermoFisher) supplemented with Insulin (1721 nM), Transferrin (68.7 nM), Selenium (38.7 nM) (ITS-X; Cat No: 51500-056; Gibco, ThermoFisher) and Penicillin-Streptomycin. After a further 4 days of cell culture, over 60% of the cells had fused into myotubes.
Immunolabelling of muscle sections using peroxidise
Immunolabelling was performed on unfixed 5–6 micron thick sections of muscle frozen in isopentane cooled in liquid nitrogen. Sections were immunolabelled with nebulin primary antibodies (diluted 1:3 in PBS buffer) for 1 hour and visualised using the X-cell Plus Polymer kit (A.Menarini Diagnostics, Winnersh-Wokingham, UK) followed by 3, 3′ diaminobenzidine and peroxidase. Counterstaining was with haematoxylin. After labelling and counterstaining, sections were dehydrated, cleared in xylene and mounted in DPX. Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against myosin heavy-chains from Leica Biosystems were: Fast myosin (NCL-MHCf), Slow myosin (NCL-MHCs), Neonatal myosin (NCL-MHCn) and Developmental myosin (NCL-MHCd). They were used according to supplier’s recommendations and labelled with the Menarini kit described above. The muscle biopsies (quadriceps) were from a 15-year old male cerebral palsy patient, the MRC Biobank or a mild myopathy patient (13 year old female).
Immunofluorescence microscopy
Immunolabelling was performed on cells cultured on coverslips, fixed with 50:50 acetone-methanol and washed with PBS, or on muscle frozen sections. Monoclonal antibodies in culture supernatants were diluted 1:3 in PBS and incubated on the specimen for 1 hour. Following washing, incubation was continued with 5 µg/ml goat anti-mouse ALEXA 488 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oregon, USA) secondary antibody diluted in PBS containing 1% horse serum, 1% fetal bovine serum and 0.1% BSA, for 1 hour. DAPI (diamidinophenylindole at 200 ng/ml) was added for the final 10 minutes of incubation to counterstain nuclei before mounting in Hydromount (Merck). Sequential confocal scans performed with a Leica TCS SP5 spectral confocal microscope (Leica Microsystems, Milton Keynes, UK).
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting
Human muscle tissue was extracted in: 50 mM Tris pH 6.8, 1% EDTA, 10% SDS, 5% beta-mercaptoethanol, 10% glycerol with protease inhibitors. After the addition of bromophenol blue and after boiling, the extract was loaded, either as a single strip or in formed wells, and subjected to SDS-PAGE using 4 to 12% polyacrylamide gradient gels and transferred to nitrocellulose membranes (Protan BA85, Whatman). After blocking non-specific sites with 5% skimmed milk protein, membranes were incubated for 1 hour with monoclonal antibody (1/50), followed by washing and incubation for 1 hour with peroxidase-labelled rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulins (1/1000, Dakopatts, Denmark). Antibody reacting bands were visualized with West Pico or West Femto chemiluminescent detection systems (Pierce, Thermofisher). Prestained Mr markers were EZ-Run 10–170 kD or PageRuler Plus 10–250 kD (both Thermofisher).
qPCR
Total RNA was prepared from cultured cells and from skeletal muscle samples using RNeasy Plus Mini Kit (Qiagen) and quantified with a NanoDrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer. Fetal muscle was obtained from the MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Disease Biobank, London. Adult muscle (18 year male) was obtained during routine surgery at RJAH Orthopaedic Hospital, Oswestry (with informed consent and ethical approval). Total RNA (maximum of 2.5 µg in a 20 µL reaction) was reverse transcribed (SuperScript VILO cDNA Synthesis Kit; Applied Biosystems) and then diluted with sterile water, in order to achieve the cDNA equivalent of 10 ng total RNA for each 20 µL reaction in the qPCR plate. Primers were: Ex143F: 5′GCTGATTATGAGCAGCGGAAAG or Ex144F: 5′GGATGTAATGAAATTCTGCGT in combination with Ex145R: 5′TCGCTGATTTGTTTGTTGACTT.
Relative quantitative PCR was performed using SYBR green detection in an ABI 7500 Real Time PCR system (Applied Biosystems). Reaction wells contained 10 µL SYBR Select Master Mix (Applied Biosystems), 1.5 µL cDNA, 300 nM Forward and 300 nM Reverse primers in a final volume of 20 µL. For each preparation of cDNA, each target sequence was amplified along with two endogenous controls (Beta-actin and GAPDH). Quantitation of target transcripts relative to the two endogenous reference transcripts were calculated by the 2−∆CT method24,25. The efficiency of primer pairs for quantitative PCR was determined by making serial dilutions of the cDNA, performing absolute quantitation, plotting CT versus log cDNA dilution, with the slope of the line being used to calculate efficiency25. Dissociation curves were obtained to ensure that each primer pair gave a single peak.
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Acknowledgements
This project was supported by grants from Institute of Orthopaedics (RJAH, Oswestry), Muscular Dystrophy Association (USA), Sigrid Jusélius Foundation, Association Francaise contre les Myopathies (Grant No. 18761), Finska Läkaresällskapet, Muscular Dystrophy UK (Grant No. 16NEM-PG36-0094-2), Medicinska understödsföreningen Liv och Hälsa and Samfundet Folkhälsan. We thank Dr. Jan-Herman Kuiper (RJAH, Oswestry and Keele University) for statistical advice and calculations.
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The project was conceived and planned by C.W.-P., K.P., C.A.S. and G.E.M. The nebulin expression constructs were produced by J.L. and M.H. Protein immunogens were produced by L.T.L. Nebulin antibodies were produced by I.H., G.E.M. and L.T.L. Further experimental work was done by I.H., L.T.L., C.A.S. and G.E.M. Data analysis was performed by C.A.S. and G.E.M. The paper was written by G.E.M., J.L. and C.A.S.; it was read and improved by all authors.
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Lam, L.T., Holt, I., Laitila, J. et al. Two alternatively-spliced human nebulin isoforms with either exon 143 or exon 144 and their developmental regulation. Sci Rep 8, 15728 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33281-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33281-6
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