Highlights
- •The most frequent cause of death in Friedreich ataxia is cardiomyopathy.
- •Abnormal intercalated discs contribute to Friedreich cardiomyopathy.
- •Intercalated discs and gap junctions are normal in long-surviving patients.
Abstract
Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disorder with a complex clinical
and neuropathological phenotype, but the most frequent cause of death is cardiomyopathy.
The principal autopsy findings in FRDA hearts are concentric hypertrophy, enlargement
of cardiomyocytes, myofiber necrosis, inflammatory infiltration, scarring, and random
accumulation of iron. In addition, the myocardium shows generalized disorganization
of intercalated discs (ICD), the Velcro-like end-to-end connections of heart fibers
that provide mechanical cohesion and ionic coupling. The principal components of ICD
are fascia adherens junctions (FAJ), desmosomes, and gap junctions. Frataxin deficiency
in FRDA may cause improper assembly of ICD early in life, making hearts vulnerable
to mechanical stress in childhood and adolescence. We studied the ICD in the myocardium
of left ventricular wall (LVW), right ventricular wall, and ventricular septum in
18 genetically confirmed FRDA patients (age of death, 10 to 87 years) and 12 normal controls (age of death, 13 to 69 years). In cases with juvenile onset, electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry
of N-cadherin and vinculin, two abundant FAJ proteins, showed enlargement of ICD,
discontinuity, and hyperconvolution. Reaction product of the desmosomal protein desmoglein
2 was similar. The distribution of the gap junction protein connexin 43 at ICD was
also irregular and displayed abnormal lateralization to the plasma membranes of cardiomyocytes.
Confocal immunofluorescence microscopy of α-actinin, affinity fluorescence microscopy
of actin with rhodamine-labeled phalloidin, and electron microscopy, revealed the
principal integrity of sarcomeres of the myocardium in FRDA. In two late-onset long-surviving
FRDA patients (ages 79 and 87), clinical cardiomyopathy was absent, and ICD were normal.
The described observations in patients with a broad range of disease onset and duration
allow us to conclude that faulty assembly of ICD interferes with proper end-to-end
adhesion of cardiomyocytes of the growing heart and contributes to the pathogenesis
of FRDA cardiomyopathy.
Keywords
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Article info
Publication history
Published online: June 03, 2016
Accepted:
June 2,
2016
Received in revised form:
May 18,
2016
Received:
March 17,
2016
Identification
Copyright
Published by Elsevier B.V.