1. Academic Validation
  2. Laminin-alpha4 and integrin-linked kinase mutations cause human cardiomyopathy via simultaneous defects in cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells

Laminin-alpha4 and integrin-linked kinase mutations cause human cardiomyopathy via simultaneous defects in cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells

  • Circulation. 2007 Jul 31;116(5):515-25. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.689984.
Ralph Knöll 1 Ruben Postel Jianming Wang Ralph Krätzner Gerrit Hennecke Andrei M Vacaru Padmanabhan Vakeel Cornelia Schubert Kenton Murthy Brinda K Rana Dieter Kube Gudrun Knöll Katrin Schäfer Takeharu Hayashi Torbjorn Holm Akinori Kimura Nicholas Schork Mohammad Reza Toliat Peter Nürnberg Heinz-Peter Schultheiss Wolfgang Schaper Jutta Schaper Erik Bos Jeroen Den Hertog Fredericus J M van Eeden Peter J Peters Gerd Hasenfuss Kenneth R Chien Jeroen Bakkers
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, Calif, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

Background: Extracellular matrix proteins, such as laminins, and endothelial cells are known to influence cardiomyocyte performance; however, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood.

Methods and results: We used a forward genetic screen in zebrafish to identify novel genes required for myocardial function and were able to identify the lost-contact (loc) mutant, which encodes a nonsense mutation in the integrin-linked kinase (ilk) gene. This loc/ilk mutant is associated with a severe defect in cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells that leads to severe myocardial dysfunction. Additional experiments revealed the epistatic regulation between laminin-alpha4 (Lama4), Integrin, and Ilk, which led us to screen for mutations in the human ILK and LAMA4 genes in patients with severe dilated cardiomyopathy. We identified 2 novel amino acid residue-altering mutations (2828C>T [Pro943Leu] and 3217C>T [Arg1073X]) in the integrin-interacting domain of the LAMA4 gene and 1 mutation (785C>T [Ala262Val]) in the ILK gene. Biacore quantitative protein/protein interaction data, which have been used to determine the equilibrium dissociation constants, point to the loss of integrin-binding capacity in case of the Pro943Leu (Kd=5+/-3 micromol/L) and Arg1073X LAMA4 (Kd=1+/-0.2 micromol/L) mutants compared with the wild-type LAMA4 protein (Kd=440+/-20 nmol/L). Additional functional data point to the loss of endothelial cells in affected patients as a direct consequence of the mutant genes, which ultimately leads to heart failure.

Conclusions: This is the first report on mutations in the laminin, Integrin, and ILK system in human cardiomyopathy, which has consequences for endothelial cells as well as for cardiomyocytes, thus providing a new genetic basis for dilated cardiomyopathy in humans.

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