4.1 Article

Facioscapulohumeral Disease as a myodevelopmental disease: Applying Ockham's razor to its various features

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROMUSCULAR DISEASES
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages 411-425

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JND-221624

Keywords

FSHD; facioscapulohumeral disease; embryogenesis; mesenchymal cells; satellite cells

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Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a human neuromuscular disease caused by the loss of epigenetic repression of the D4Z4 repeat on chromosome 4q35, resulting in inappropriate transcription of DUX4. This is due to a reduction of the repeat size or a mutation in methylating enzymes, requiring specific genetic alleles. The progression of the disease is variable, and it can manifest as mild or non-penetrant in affected individuals. FSHD is hypothesized to be a myodevelopmental disease with a lifelong attempt to restore DUX4 repression.
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an exclusively human neuromuscular disease. In the last decades the cause of FSHD was identified: the loss of epigenetic repression of the D4Z4 repeat on chromosome 4q35 resulting in inappropriate transcription of DUX4. This is a consequence of a reduction of the array below 11 units (FSHD1) or of a mutation in methylating enzymes (FSHD2). Both require the presence of a 4qA allele and a specific centromeric SSLP haplotype. Muscles become involved in a rostro-caudally order with an extremely variable progression rate. Mild disease and non-penetrance in families with affected individuals is common. Furthermore, 2% of the Caucasian population carries the pathological haplotype without clinical features of FSHD. In order to explain the various features of FSHD we applied Ockham's Razor to all possible scenarios and removed unnecessary complexities. We postulate that early in embryogenesis a few cells escape epigenetic silencing of the D4Z4 repeat. Their number is assumed to be roughly inversely related to the residual D4Z4 repeat size. By asymmetric cell division, they produce a rostro-caudal and medio-lateral decreasing gradient of weakly D4Z4-repressed mesenchymal stem cells. The gradient tapers towards an end as each cell-division allows renewed epigenetic silencing. Over time, this spatial gradient translates into a temporal gradient based on a decreasing number of weakly silenced stem cells. These cells contribute to a mildly abnormal myofibrillar structure of the fetal muscles. They also form a downward tapering gradient of epigenetically weakly repressed satellite cells. When activated by mechanical trauma, these satellite cells de-differentiate and express DUX4. When fused to myofibrils they contribute to muscle cell death in various ways. Over time and dependent on how far the gradient reaches the FSHD phenotype becomes progressively manifest. We thus hypothesize FSHD to be a myodevelopmental disease with a lifelong attempt to restore DUX4 repression.

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