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Consequences of plectin ablation on the various intermediate filament systems in skeletal muscle

  • Marta Rocha
  • , Jonas Petsch
  • , Dorothea Schultheis
  • , Michaela M. Zrelski
  • , Petra Fichtinger
  • , Inga Koneczny
  • , Samuel Meier-Menches
  • , Gerhard Wiche
  • , Rolf Schröder
  • , Lilli Winter (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Plectin, a highly versatile and multifunctional cytolinker, acts as a central connector of the intermediate filament (IF) and other cytoskeletal systems. In skeletal muscle, plectin orchestrates and anchors the extrasarcomeric desmin filament network to sites of strategic importance and thereby substantially contributes to its fundamental biomechanical properties. Lack of plectin in skeletal muscle leads to a faulty organization of the desmin IFs, thereby inflicting a reduced mechanical stress tolerance and a progressive myopathic process. Accordingly, the morphological hallmark of the skeletal muscle pathology in most plectinopathies, including epidermolysis bullosa simplex with muscular dystrophy (EBS-MD), is the accumulation of desmin-positive protein aggregates. To address the consequences of plectin-deficiency on other types of IFs, RNA and protein expression as well as localization of various IF subtypes was evaluated in muscle tissue from wild-type and muscle-specific conditional plectin knockout (MCK-Cre/cKO) mice. Notably, vimentin and syncoilin, as well as several other IF subtypes, were significantly upregulated in MCK-Cre/cKO muscles and accumulated in subsarcolemmal and sarcoplasmic areas. In plectin-deficient mouse myoblasts, increased expression levels of vimentin were accompanied by the formation of thickened IF bundles. Primary human myoblasts, treated with the plectin inhibitor plecstatin-1, displayed increased bundling of desmin and vimentin, thus supporting the notion of drastic structural and organizational changes in the network. Finally, we were able to demonstrate the presence of vimentin-positive protein aggregates in skeletal muscle specimens from EBS-MD patients. Together, these data indicate that the depletion of plectin in muscle unequivocally affected the expression and localization of various types of IFs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number151522
JournalEuropean Journal of Cell Biology
Volume104
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF)P31541-B27, I6049-B
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinsachft (DFG)SCHR 562/19-1, 441730715

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 106052 Cell biology

Keywords

  • Cytoskeleton
  • Desmin
  • Intermediate filaments
  • Plectin
  • Plectinopathies
  • Skeletal muscle
  • Vimentin

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