Authors
Simon JG St‐Pierre, Joe V Chakkalakal, Steven M Kolodziejczyk, Jennifer C Knudson, Bernard J Jasmin, Lynn A Megeney
Publication date
2004/12
Source
The FASEB journal
Volume
18
Issue
15
Pages
1937-1939
Publisher
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
Description
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a progressive and ultimately fatal skeletal muscle disease. Currently, the most effective therapy is the administration of a subclass of glucocorticoids, most notably deflazacort. Although deflazacort treatment can attenuate DMD progression, extend ambulation, and maintain muscle strength, the mechanism of its action remains unknown. Prior observations have shown that activation of a JNK1‐mediated signal transduction cascade contributes to the progression of the DMD phenotype, in part by phosphorylation and inhibition of a calcineurin sensitive NF‐ATc1 transcription factor. Here, we observed that deflazacort treatment restored myocyte viability in muscle cells with constitutive activation of JNK1 and in dystrophic mdx mice. However, deflazacort treatment did not alter JNK1 activity itself, but rather led to an increase in the activity of the calcineurin phosphatase and an up …
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