Activation of fast skeletal muscle troponin as a potential therapeutic approach for treating neuromuscular diseases

AJ Russell, JJ Hartman, AC Hinken, AR Muci… - Nature medicine, 2012 - nature.com
AJ Russell, JJ Hartman, AC Hinken, AR Muci, R Kawas, L Driscoll, G Godinez, KH Lee
Nature medicine, 2012nature.com
Limited neural input results in muscle weakness in neuromuscular disease because of a
reduction in the density of muscle innervation, the rate of neuromuscular junction activation
or the efficiency of synaptic transmission. We developed a small-molecule fast-skeletal–
troponin activator, CK-2017357, as a means to increase muscle strength by amplifying the
response of muscle when neural input is otherwise diminished secondary to neuromuscular
disease. Binding selectively to the fast-skeletal–troponin complex, CK-2017357 slows the …
Abstract
Limited neural input results in muscle weakness in neuromuscular disease because of a reduction in the density of muscle innervation, the rate of neuromuscular junction activation or the efficiency of synaptic transmission. We developed a small-molecule fast-skeletal–troponin activator, CK-2017357, as a means to increase muscle strength by amplifying the response of muscle when neural input is otherwise diminished secondary to neuromuscular disease. Binding selectively to the fast-skeletal–troponin complex, CK-2017357 slows the rate of calcium release from troponin C and sensitizes muscle to calcium. As a consequence, the force-calcium relationship of muscle fibers shifts leftwards, as does the force-frequency relationship of a nerve-muscle pair, so that CK-2017357 increases the production of muscle force in situ at sub-maximal nerve stimulation rates. Notably, we show that sensitization of the fast-skeletal–troponin complex to calcium improves muscle force and grip strength immediately after administration of single doses of CK-2017357 in a model of the neuromuscular disease myasthenia gravis. Troponin activation may provide a new therapeutic approach to improve physical activity in diseases where neuromuscular function is compromised.
nature.com