A missense mutation (E706K) in the myosin heavy chain IIa gene was previously reported to be responsible for an autosomal dominant myopathy (Martinsson, T. et al (2000) PNAS 97:14614). The disease is generally progressive in nature: the myopathy is mild in childhood and adolescence but often becomes severe from 30 to 50 years of age, causing increasing muscle weakness. In affected individuals, there is a variability of muscle fiber sizes, disorganization of muscle filaments and the occurrence of rimmed vacuoles and occasional cytoplasmic and nuclear inclusion bodies. The E706K mutation affects a highly conserved amino acid within the catalytic head domain of the myosin heavy chain gene. Many questions are unresolved concerning the disease mechanism. For example, it is unknown whether the mutant heavy chain variant is incorporated within muscle fibers and, if so, whether such fibers are abnormal structurally or functionally. We are attempting to establish C. elegans as a model organism for this disease. In particular we are studying six types of C. elegans lines: 1) wild-type N2; 2)
unc-54 (
e190) null mutant; 3) N2; Ex(pPD5.41), which carries the
unc-54 gene on an extrachromosomal array; 4) N2; Ex(pE707K), which carries a
unc-54 gene with a point mutation equivalent to that in the human disease; 5)
unc-54; Ex( pPD5.41) and; 6)
unc-54; Ex(E707K). The strains are assayed for motility and examined by electron microscopy to evaluate the status of their body wall muscles. Our preliminary results indicate that lines carrying
unc-54 on extrachromosomal arrays (wild-type or mutant forms) never move as well as wild-type. However, arrays bearing wild-type
unc-54 can partially rescue the
unc-54 null mutants both in terms of locomotion and ultrastructure. In contrast, the E707K mutant form of myosin is unable to rescue the
unc-54 mutant and indeed completely impairs residual locomotion in the mutant and causes a dramatic decline in larval viability.