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Dive into the research topics where Danielle Buck is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle Buck.


Brain | 2013

Deleting exon 55 from the nebulin gene induces severe muscle weakness in a mouse model for nemaline myopathy

Coen A.C. Ottenheijm; Danielle Buck; Josine M. de Winter; Claudia Ferrara; Chiara Tesi; Jeffrey R. Jasper; Fady Malik; Hui Meng; Ger J.M. Stienen; Alan H. Beggs; Siegfried Labeit; Corrado Poggesi; Michael W. Lawlor; Henk Granzier

Nebulin--a giant sarcomeric protein--plays a pivotal role in skeletal muscle contractility by specifying thin filament length and function. Although mutations in the gene encoding nebulin (NEB) are a frequent cause of nemaline myopathy, the most common non-dystrophic congenital myopathy, the mechanisms by which mutations in NEB cause muscle weakness remain largely unknown. To better understand these mechanisms, we have generated a mouse model in which Neb exon 55 is deleted (Neb(ΔExon55)) to replicate a founder mutation seen frequently in patients with nemaline myopathy with Ashkenazi Jewish heritage. Neb(ΔExon55) mice are born close to Mendelian ratios, but show growth retardation after birth. Electron microscopy studies show nemaline bodies--a hallmark feature of nemaline myopathy--in muscle fibres from Neb(ΔExon55) mice. Western blotting studies with nebulin-specific antibodies reveal reduced nebulin levels in muscle from Neb(ΔExon55) mice, and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy studies with tropomodulin antibodies and phalloidin reveal that thin filament length is significantly reduced. In line with reduced thin filament length, the maximal force generating capacity of permeabilized muscle fibres and single myofibrils is reduced in Neb(ΔExon55) mice with a more pronounced reduction at longer sarcomere lengths. Finally, in Neb(ΔExon55) mice the regulation of contraction is impaired, as evidenced by marked changes in crossbridge cycling kinetics and by a reduction of the calcium sensitivity of force generation. A novel drug that facilitates calcium binding to the thin filament significantly augmented the calcium sensitivity of submaximal force to levels that exceed those observed in untreated control muscle. In conclusion, we have characterized the first nebulin-based nemaline myopathy model, which recapitulates important features of the phenotype observed in patients harbouring this particular mutation, and which has severe muscle weakness caused by thin filament dysfunction.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Troponin activator augments muscle force in nemaline myopathy patients with nebulin mutations

Josine M. de Winter; Danielle Buck; Carlos Hidalgo; Jeffrey R. Jasper; Fady Malik; Nigel F. Clarke; Ger J.M. Stienen; Michael W. Lawlor; Alan H. Beggs; Coen A.C. Ottenheijm; Henk Granzier

Background Nemaline myopathy—the most common non-dystrophic congenital myopathy—is caused by mutations in thin filament genes, of which the nebulin gene is the most frequently affected one. The nebulin gene codes for the giant sarcomeric protein nebulin, which plays a crucial role in skeletal muscle contractile performance. Muscle weakness is a hallmark feature of nemaline myopathy patients with nebulin mutations, and is caused by changes in contractile protein function, including a lower calcium-sensitivity of force generation. To date no therapy exists to treat muscle weakness in nemaline myopathy. Here, we studied the ability of the novel fast skeletal muscle troponin activator, CK-2066260, to augment force generation at submaximal calcium levels in muscle cells from nemaline myopathy patients with nebulin mutations. Methods Contractile protein function was determined in permeabilised muscle cells isolated from frozen patient biopsies. The effect of 5 μM CK-2066260 on force production was assessed. Results Nebulin protein concentrations were severely reduced in muscle cells from these patients compared to controls, while myofibrillar ultrastructure was largely preserved. Both maximal active tension and the calcium-sensitivity of force generation were lower in patients compared to controls. Importantly, CK-2066260 greatly increased the calcium-sensitivity of force generation—without affecting the cooperativity of activation—in patients to levels that exceed those observed in untreated control muscle. Conclusions Fast skeletal troponin activation is a therapeutic mechanism to augment contractile protein function in nemaline myopathy patients with nebulin mutations and with other neuromuscular diseases.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2010

Differential splicing of the large sarcomeric protein nebulin during skeletal muscle development

Danielle Buck; Bryan D. Hudson; Coen A.C. Ottenheijm; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier

We studied differential splicing of nebulin, a giant filamentous F-actin binding protein (M(r) approximately 700-800kDa) that is found in skeletal muscle. Nebulin spans the thin filament length, its C-terminus is anchored in the Z-disc, and its N-terminal region is located toward the thin filament pointed end. Various lines of evidence indicate that nebulin plays important roles in thin filament and Z-disc structure in skeletal muscle. In the present work we studied nebulin in a range of muscle types during postnatal development and performed transcript studies with a mouse nebulin exon microarray, developed by us, whose results were confirmed by RT-PCR. We also performed protein studies with high-resolution SDS-agarose gels and Western blots, and structural studies with electron microscopy. We found during postnatal development of the soleus muscle major changes in splicing in both the super-repeat region and the Z-disc region of nebulin; interestingly, these changes were absent in other muscle types. Three novel Z-disc exons, previously described in the mouse gene, were upregulated during postnatal development of soleus muscle and this was correlated with a significant increase in Z-disc width. These findings support the view that nebulin plays an important role in Z-disc width regulation. In summary, we discovered changes in both the super-repeat region and the Z-disc region of nebulin, that these changes are muscle-type specific, and that they correlate with differences in sarcomere structure.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2014

Removal of immunoglobulin-like domains from titin’s spring segment alters titin splicing in mouse skeletal muscle and causes myopathy

Danielle Buck; John E. Smith; Charles S. Chung; Yasuko Ono; Hiroyuki Sorimachi; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier

Changes in titin splicing resulting in decreased size and increased stiffness lead to pathological changes in skeletal muscle.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

Nebulin deficiency in adult muscle causes sarcomere defects and muscle-type-dependent changes in trophicity: novel insights in nemaline myopathy

Frank Li; Danielle Buck; Josine M. de Winter; Justin Kolb; Hui Meng; Camille Birch; Rebecca Slater; Yael Natelie Escobar; John E. Smith; Lin Yang; John P. Konhilas; Michael W. Lawlor; C. Ottenheijm; Henk Granzier

Nebulin is a giant filamentous protein that is coextensive with the actin filaments of the skeletal muscle sarcomere. Nebulin mutations are the main cause of nemaline myopathy (NEM), with typical adult patients having low expression of nebulin, yet the roles of nebulin in adult muscle remain poorly understood. To establish nebulins functional roles in adult muscle, we studied a novel conditional nebulin KO (Neb cKO) mouse model in which nebulin deletion was driven by the muscle creatine kinase (MCK) promotor. Neb cKO mice are born with high nebulin levels in their skeletal muscles, but within weeks after birth nebulin expression rapidly falls to barely detectable levels Surprisingly, a large fraction of the mice survive to adulthood with low nebulin levels (<5% of control), contain nemaline rods and undergo fiber-type switching toward oxidative types. Nebulin deficiency causes a large deficit in specific force, and mechanistic studies provide evidence that a reduced fraction of force-generating cross-bridges and shortened thin filaments contribute to the force deficit. Muscles rich in glycolytic fibers upregulate proteolysis pathways (MuRF-1, Fbxo30/MUSA1, Gadd45a) and undergo hypotrophy with smaller cross-sectional areas (CSAs), worsening their force deficit. Muscles rich in oxidative fibers do not have smaller weights and can even have hypertrophy, offsetting their specific-force deficit. These studies reveal nebulin as critically important for force development and trophicity in adult muscle. The Neb cKO phenocopies important aspects of NEM (muscle weakness, oxidative fiber-type predominance, variable trophicity effects, nemaline rods) and will be highly useful to test therapeutic approaches to ameliorate muscle weakness.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Fast Skeletal Muscle Troponin Activation Increases Force of Mouse Fast Skeletal Muscle and Ameliorates Weakness Due to Nebulin-Deficiency

Eun-Jeong Lee; Josine M. de Winter; Danielle Buck; Jeffrey R. Jasper; Fady Malik; Siegfried Labeit; Coen A.C. Ottenheijm; Henk Granzier

The effect of the fast skeletal muscle troponin activator, CK-2066260, on calcium-induced force development was studied in skinned fast skeletal muscle fibers from wildtype (WT) and nebulin deficient (NEB KO) mice. Nebulin is a sarcomeric protein that when absent (NEB KO mouse) or present at low levels (nemaline myopathy (NM) patients with NEB mutations) causes muscle weakness. We studied the effect of fast skeletal troponin activation on WT muscle and tested whether it might be a therapeutic mechanism to increase muscle strength in nebulin deficient muscle. We measured tension–pCa relations with and without added CK-2066260. Maximal active tension in NEB KO tibialis cranialis fibers in the absence of CK-2066260 was ∼60% less than in WT fibers, consistent with earlier work. CK-2066260 shifted the tension-calcium relationship leftwards, with the largest relative increase (up to 8-fold) at low to intermediate calcium levels. This was a general effect that was present in both WT and NEB KO fiber bundles. At pCa levels above ∼6.0 (i.e., calcium concentrations <1 µM), CK-2066260 increased tension of NEB KO fibers to beyond that of WT fibers. Crossbridge cycling kinetics were studied by measuring ktr (rate constant of force redevelopment following a rapid shortening/restretch). CK-2066260 greatly increased ktr at submaximal activation levels in both WT and NEB KO fiber bundles. We also studied the sarcomere length (SL) dependence of the CK-2066260 effect (SL 2.1 µm and 2.6 µm) and found that in the NEB KO fibers, CK-2066260 had a larger effect on calcium sensitivity at the long SL. We conclude that fast skeletal muscle troponin activation increases force at submaximal activation in both wildtype and NEB KO fiber bundles and, importantly, that this troponin activation is a potential therapeutic mechanism for increasing force in NM and other skeletal muscle diseases with loss of muscle strength.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2013

P.9.10 Deleting exon 55 from the nebulin gene induces severe muscle weakness in a mouse model for nemaline myopathy

C. Ottenheijm; Danielle Buck; J. de Winter; Claudia Ferrara; Chiara Tesi; R. Jasper; Farida Malik; F. Meng; Ger J.M. Stienen; Alan H. Beggs; Siegfried Labeit; Corrado Poggesi; Michael W. Lawlor; Henk Granzier

Nebulin – a giant sarcomeric protein – plays a pivotal role in skeletal muscle contractility by specifying thin filament length and function. Although mutations in the gene encoding nebulin (NEB) are a frequent cause of nemaline myopathy (NM), the most common non-dystrophic congenital myopathy, the mechanisms by which mutations in NEB cause muscle weakness remain largely unknown. To better understand these mechanisms, we have generated a mouse model in which Neb exon 55 is deleted (Neb Δex55 ) to replicate a founder mutation seen frequently in NM patients with Ashkenazi Jewish heritage. Neb Δex55 mice are born close to Mendelian ratios, but show growth retardation after birth. Electron microscopy studies show nemaline bodies – a hallmark feature of NM – in muscle fibers from Neb Δex55 mice. Western blotting studies with nebulin-specific antibodies reveal reduced nebulin levels in muscle from Neb ΔExon55 mice, and immunofluorescence confocal microscopy studies with tropomodulin antibodies and phalloidin reveal that thin filament length is significantly reduced. In line with reduced thin filament length, the maximal force generating capacity of permeabilized muscle fibers and single myofibrils is reduced in Neb Δex55 mice with a more pronounced reduction at longer sarcomere lengths. Finally, in Neb Δex55 mice the regulation of contraction is impaired, as evidenced by marked changes in cross bridge cycling kinetics and by a reduction of the calcium sensitivity of force generation. A novel drug that facilitates calcium binding to the thin filament significantly augmented the calcium sensitivity of submaximal force to levels that exceed those observed in untreated control muscle. In conclusion, we have characterized the first nebulin-based NM model, which recapitulates important features of the phenotype observed in patients harboring this particular mutation, and which has severe muscle weakness caused by thin filament dysfunction.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Tuning Passive Mechanics through Differential Splicing of Titin during Skeletal Muscle Development

Coen A.C. Ottenheijm; Anna M. Knottnerus; Danielle Buck; Xiuju Luo; Kevin A. Greer; Adam Hoying; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Thin Filament Length in Mouse Skeletal Muscle and its Relationship to Differential Splicing of Nebulin

Danielle Buck; Paola Tonino; Adam Hoying; Henk Granzier


Biophysical Journal | 2017

Thick Filament Compliance in Passively Stretched Skeletal Muscle

Weikang Ma; Danielle Buck; Joshua Nedrud; Thomas C. Irving; Henk Granzier

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Michael W. Lawlor

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Josine M. de Winter

VU University Medical Center

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Alan H. Beggs

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ger J.M. Stienen

VU University Medical Center

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