Increasing agrin function antagonizes muscle atrophy and motor impairment in spinal muscular atrophy

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Abstract

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a pediatric genetic disease, characterized by motor neuron (MN) death, leading to progressive muscle weakness, respiratory failure, and, in the most severe cases, to death. Abnormalities at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) have been reported in SMA, including neurofilament (NF) accumulation at presynaptic terminals, immature andsmaller than normal endplates, reducedtransmitter release, and, finally, muscle denervation. Here we have studied the role of agrin in SMA∆7 mice, the experimental model of SMAII. We observed a 50% reduction in agrin expression levels in quadriceps of P10 SMA mice compared to age-matched WT controls. To counteract such condition, we treated SMAmice frombirth onwards with therapeutic agrin biological NT-1654, an active splice variant of agrin retaining synaptogenic properties, which is also resistant to proteolytic cleavage by neurotrypsin. Mice were analyzedfor behavior, muscle and NMJ histology, and survival. Motor behavior was significantly improved and survival was extended by treatment of SMA mice with NT-1654. At P10, H/E-stained sections of the quadriceps, a proximal muscle early involvedin SMA, showedthat NT-1654 treatment strongly prevented the size decrease of muscle fibers. Studies of NMJ morphology on whole-mount diaphragm preparations revealed that NT-1654-treated SMA mice had more mature NMJs and reduced NF accumulation, compared to vehicle-treated SMA mice. We conclude that increasing agrin function in SMA has beneficial outcomes on muscle fibers and NMJs as the agrin biological NT-1654 restores the crosstalk between muscle and MNs, delaying muscular atrophy, improving motor performance and extending survival.

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Boido, M., de Amicis, E., Valsecchi, V., Trevisan, M., Ala, U., Ruegg, M. A., … Vercelli, A. (2018). Increasing agrin function antagonizes muscle atrophy and motor impairment in spinal muscular atrophy. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2018.00017

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