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Featured researches published by O’Neal Copeland.


Circulation Research | 2009

Evidence From Human Myectomy Samples That MYBPC3 Mutations Cause Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Through Haploinsufficiency

Steven B. Marston; O’Neal Copeland; Adam Jacques; Karen Livesey; Victor Tsang; William J. McKenna; Shapour Jalilzadeh; Sebastian Carballo; Charles Redwood; Hugh Watkins

Rationale: Most sarcomere gene mutations that cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are missense alleles that encode dominant negative proteins. The potential exceptions are mutations in the MYBPC3 gene (encoding cardiac myosin-binding protein-C [MyBP-C]), which frequently encode truncated proteins. Objective: We sought to determine whether there was evidence of haploinsufficiency in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy caused by MYBPC3 mutations by comparing left ventricular muscle from patients undergoing surgical myectomy with samples from donor hearts. Methods and Results: MyBP-C protein and mRNA levels were quantitated using immunoblotting and RT-PCR. Nine of 37 myectomy samples had mutations in MYBPC3: 2 missense alleles (Glu258Lys, Arg502Trp) and 7 premature terminations. No specific truncated MyBP-C peptides were detected in whole muscle homogenates of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy tissue. However, the overall level of MyBP-C in myofibrils was significantly reduced (P<0.0005) in tissue containing either a truncation or missense MYBPC3 mutation: 0.76±0.03 compared with 1.00±0.05 in donor and 1.01±0.06 in non-MYBPC3 mutant myectomies. Conclusions: The absence of any detectable truncated MyBP-C argues against its incorporation in the myofiber and any dominant negative effect. In contrast, the lowered relative level of full length protein in both truncation and missense MYBPC3 mutations argues strongly that haploinsufficiency is sufficient to cause the disease.


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2012

How do MYBPC3 mutations cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Steven B. Marston; O’Neal Copeland; Katja Gehmlich; Saskia Schlossarek; Lucie Carrrier

It is well established that MYBPC3 mutations are the most common cause of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, accounting for about half of identified mutations. However, when compared with mutations in other myofibrillar proteins that cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, MYBPC3 mutations seem to be the odd one out. The most striking characteristic of HCM mutations in MYBPC3 is that many are within introns and are predicted to cause aberrant splicing leading to a frameshift and a premature chain termination, yet the truncated peptides have never been identified in human heart tissue carrying these mutations. Instead of expression of a poison peptide we consistently observe haploinsufficiency of MyBP-C in MYBPC3 mutant human heart muscle. In this review we investigate the mechanism for MyBP-C haploinsufficiency and consider how this haploinsufficiency could cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.


PLOS ONE | 2015

OBSCN Mutations Associated with Dilated Cardiomyopathy and Haploinsufficiency.

Steven B. Marston; Cécile Montgiraud; Alex B. Munster; O’Neal Copeland; Onjee Choi; Cristobal G. dos Remedios; Andrew E. Messer; Elisabeth Ehler; Ralph Knöll

Background Studies of the functional consequences of DCM-causing mutations have been limited to a few cases where patients with known mutations had heart transplants. To increase the number of potential tissue samples for direct investigation we performed whole exon sequencing of explanted heart muscle samples from 30 patients that had a diagnosis of familial dilated cardiomyopathy and screened for potentially disease-causing mutations in 58 HCM or DCM-related genes. Results We identified 5 potentially disease-causing OBSCN mutations in 4 samples; one sample had two OBSCN mutations and one mutation was judged to be not disease-related. Also identified were 6 truncating mutations in TTN, 3 mutations in MYH7, 2 in DSP and one each in TNNC1, TNNI3, MYOM1, VCL, GLA, PLB, TCAP, PKP2 and LAMA4. The mean level of obscurin mRNA was significantly greater and more variable in healthy donor samples than the DCM samples but did not correlate with OBSCN mutations. A single obscurin protein band was observed in human heart myofibrils with apparent mass 960 ± 60 kDa. The three samples with OBSCN mutations had significantly lower levels of obscurin immunoreactive material than DCM samples without OBSCN mutations (45±7, 48±3, and 72±6% of control level).Obscurin levels in DCM controls, donor heart and myectomy samples were the same. Conclusions OBSCN mutations may result in the development of a DCM phenotype via haploinsufficiency. Mutations in the obscurin gene should be considered as a significant causal factor of DCM, alone or in concert with other mutations.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

The Dilated Cardiomyopathy-Causing Mutation ACTC E361G in Cardiac Muscle Myofibrils Specifically Abolishes Modulation of Ca2+ Regulation by Phosphorylation of Troponin I

Petr G. Vikhorev; Weihua Song; Ross Wilkinson; O’Neal Copeland; Andrew E. Messer; Michael A. Ferenczi; Steven B. Marston

Phosphorylation of troponin I by protein kinase A (PKA) reduces Ca2+ sensitivity and increases the rate of Ca2+ release from troponin C and the rate of relaxation in cardiac muscle. In vitro experiments indicate that mutations that cause dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) uncouple this modulation, but this has not been demonstrated in an intact contractile system. Using a Ca2+-jump protocol, we measured the effect of the DCM-causing mutation ACTC E361G on the equilibrium and kinetic parameters of Ca2+ regulation of contractility in single transgenic mouse heart myofibrils. We used propranolol treatment of mice to reduce the level of troponin I and myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) phosphorylation in their hearts before isolating the myofibrils. In nontransgenic mouse myofibrils, the Ca2+ sensitivity of force was increased, the fast relaxation phase rate constant, kREL, was reduced, and the length of the slow linear phase, tLIN, was increased when the troponin I phosphorylation level was reduced from 1.02 to 0.3 molPi/TnI (EC50 P/unP = 1.8 ± 0.2, p < 0.001). Native myofibrils from ACTC E361G transgenic mice had a 2.4-fold higher Ca2+ sensitivity than nontransgenic mouse myofibrils. Strikingly, the Ca2+ sensitivity and relaxation parameters of ACTC E361G myofibrils did not depend on the troponin I phosphorylation level (EC50 P/unP = 0.88 ± 0.17, p = 0.39). Nevertheless, modulation of the Ca2+ sensitivity of ACTC E361G myofibrils by sarcomere length or EMD57033 was indistinguishable from that of nontransgenic myofibrils. Overall, EC50 measured in different conditions varied over a 7-fold range. The time course of relaxation, as defined by tLIN and kREL, was correlated with EC50 but varied by just 2.7- and 3.3-fold, respectively. Our results confirm that troponin I phosphorylation specifically alters the Ca2+ sensitivity of isometric tension and the time course of relaxation in cardiac muscle myofibrils. Moreover, the DCM-causing mutation ACTC E361G blunts this phosphorylation-dependent response without affecting other parameters of contraction, including length-dependent activation and the response to EMD57033.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Abnormal contractility in human heart myofibrils from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy due to mutations in TTN and contractile protein genes

Petr G. Vikhorev; Natalia Smoktunowicz; Alex B. Munster; O’Neal Copeland; Sawa Kostin; Cécile Montgiraud; Andrew E. Messer; Mohammad R. Toliat; Amy Li; Cristobal G. dos Remedios; Sean Lal; Cheavar A. Blair; Kenneth S. Campbell; Maya Guglin; Manfred Richter; Ralph Knöll; Steven B. Marston

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is an important cause of heart failure. Single gene mutations in at least 50 genes have been proposed to account for 25–50% of DCM cases and up to 25% of inherited DCM has been attributed to truncating mutations in the sarcomeric structural protein titin (TTNtv). Whilst the primary molecular mechanism of some DCM-associated mutations in the contractile apparatus has been studied in vitro and in transgenic mice, the contractile defect in human heart muscle has not been studied. In this study we isolated cardiac myofibrils from 3 TTNtv mutants, and 3 with contractile protein mutations (TNNI3 K36Q, TNNC1 G159D and MYH7 E1426K) and measured their contractility and passive stiffness in comparison with donor heart muscle as a control. We found that the three contractile protein mutations but not the TTNtv mutations had faster relaxation kinetics. Passive stiffness was reduced about 38% in all the DCM mutant samples. However, there was no change in maximum force or the titin N2BA/N2B isoform ratio and there was no titin haploinsufficiency. The decrease in myofibril passive stiffness was a common feature in all hearts with DCM-associated mutations and may be causative of DCM.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Author Correction: Abnormal contractility in human heart myofibrils from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy due to mutations in TTN and contractile protein genes

Petr G. Vikhorev; Natalia Smoktunowicz; Alex B. Munster; O’Neal Copeland; Sawa Kostin; Cécile Montgiraud; Andrew E. Messer; Mohammad R. Toliat; Amy Li; Cristobal G. dos Remedios; Sean Lal; Cheavar A. Blair; Kenneth S. Campbell; Maya Guglin; Manfred Richter; Ralph Knöll; Steven B. Marston

A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2010

Investigation of changes in skeletal muscle α-actin expression in normal and pathological human and mouse hearts

O’Neal Copeland; Kristen J. Nowak; Nigel G. Laing; Gianina Ravenscroft; Andrew E. Messer; Christopher R. Bayliss; Steven B. Marston


Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility | 2013

Tropomyosin isoform expression and phosphorylation in the human heart in health and disease

Steven B. Marston; O’Neal Copeland; Andrew E. Messer; Elyshia MacNamara; Kristen J. Nowak; Cleidiane G. Zampronio; Douglas G. Ward


Biophysical Journal | 2013

DCM-Causing Mutation E361G in Actin Slows Myofibril Relaxation Kinetics and Uncouples Myofibril Ca2+ Sensitivity from Protein Phosphorylation

Petr G. Vikhorev; Ross Wilkinson; Weihua Song; O’Neal Copeland; Steven B. Marston; Michael A. Ferenczi


Biophysical Journal | 2015

DCM Mutation ACTCE361G Causes Uncoupling of Myofibril Sensitivity from TnI Phosphorylation that can be Reversed by Epigallocatechin-3-Gallate

Petr G. Vikhorev; Weihua Song; Ross Wilkinson; O’Neal Copeland; Michael A. Ferenczi; Steven B. Marston

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Steven B. Marston

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew E. Messer

National Institutes of Health

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Ralph Knöll

Imperial College London

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Maya Guglin

University of Kentucky

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