Abstract
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy Double Homeobox 4 Interleukin 6 Clinical Severity Score Manual Muscle Testing Repeated Units Messenger Ribonucleic Acid Magnetic resonance imaging Short tau inversion recovery Cluster of Differentiation 8 Cluster of Differentiation 4 Structural Maintenance of Chromosomes flexible Hinge Domain containing 1 Granulocyte-Macrophage-Colony-Stimulating Factor Interferon-gamma, Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha Tumor Necrosis Factor beta Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 3
INTRODUCTION
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) manifests as a progressive asymmetric myopathy with facial and upper arm muscle weakness. The most common form, called FSHD1, is dominantly inherited and has been associated with a critical contraction in D4Z4 macrosatellite repeats on chromosome 4q35, resulting in aberrant expression of the
Beyond DUX4 expression, the FSHD pathophysiology is still unknown. It has been proposed that the expression of
Given the central role of inflammation in FSHD pathophysiology, we analyze serum cytokines to identify potential severity biomarkers in a large cohort of adult patients with FSHD1. We found that IL-6 levels are higher in FSHD patients than in control and correlate with several clinically relevant functional scores. Besides, increased IL-6 levels correlate with a higher Clinical Severity Score in FSHD1 patients and levels of
METHODS
Patient study design and participants
This retrospective study was performed on
Participants
All patients were referred to the Neuromuscular Department of Nice University Hospital, France, with genetically confirmed FSHD1, defined by a D4Z4 copy number inferior to 11 on chromosome 4q, a permissive 4qA allele, and the absence of concurrent mutations in the
Exclusion criteria included: chronic pathologies which could impact immune response (autoimmune disorders, neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, neoplasms); severely reduced mobility (patients using a wheelchair most of the day for more than two years); exposure to vaccines, blood products, or residence in a tropical country during the three months preceding blood sample collection; an infectious episode during the three weeks before blood sample collection; human immunodeficiency virus, hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus seropositivity; receiving any immunosuppressive or immunomodulatory drug during the two weeks or for more than 14 consecutive days during the six months before blood sample collection; chronic alcohol consumption or illicit drug use during the three months before blood sample collection; having been placed on a particular diet regimen for medical reasons; participating or having participated in another clinical study using an investigational treatment. Samples from healthy volunteers from another study (NCT number: NCT02209142) were used [13].
For all patients, collected data included: the size of D4Z4 RUs contraction, age at examination and at disease onset, comorbidities, previous and current therapies at the time of blood sample collection.
Motor function was assessed by Manual Muscle Testing (MMT) sum score including 28 functional muscle groups from upper and lower limbs (each muscle group being scored from zero to five according to Medical Research Council scale), Brooke and Vignos scores (assessing functional impairment of upper and lower limbs respectively), Clinical Severity Score (CSS) and age-corrected CSS, as previously described [14]. Briefly, clinical severity was calculated for each participant based on muscle involvement (scored 0 to 10, increasing from face and shoulder to lower extremity). Age-corrected CSS was calculated as follow: (CSS/age) X1000. For healthy volunteers, collected data included age and demographics.
Patient and healthy serum samples
Patients’ serum samples were obtained from blood samples available in an FSHD biobank (Reference: DC2015-2374), while healthy serum samples were collected in another study (NCT02209142). The collection method was identical between controls and patients. Venipuncture was performed on fasting subjects between 7 AM and 9 AM. The blood was allowed to clot for one hour before centrifugation (1,500 g, 10 min). Serum samples were stored in 0.5 ml aliquots at –80°C. For cytokine levels, serum samples were thawed on ice and kept at –80°C in 50μl aliquots.
Immunoassay for patient samples
Serum levels of Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor (GM-CSF), interferon-gamma (IFNg), interleukin (IL)-1alpha, IL-1beta, IL-2, IL-4, IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12p40, IL-12p70, IL-13, IL-15, IL-16, IL-17, TNFα (Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha), TNFß (Tumor Necrosis Factor beta), and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) were measured using v-plex® immunoassay using the commercially available Proinflammatory Panel 1, and Cytokine Panel 1 (MSD). All assays were performed according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Data were acquired on the v-plex® Sector Imager 2400 plate reader and analyzed using the Discovery Workbench 3.0 software (MSD). Standard curves for each cytokine were generated using the premixed lyophilized standards provided in the kits. Serial two-fold dilutions of standards were run to create a 13-standard concentration set, and the diluent alone was used as a blank. The cytokine concentrations were determined from the standard curve using a robust-fit curve to transform the mean light intensities into concentrations. The lower limit of quantification (LLOD) was determined for each cytokine and each plate as twice the signal recorded for the blank.
Statistical analysis for patient samples
Outliers were detected using the GraphPad Prism7 ROUT algorithm with the more stringent parameter (
Mouse study design
All mouse work was performed at the University of Nevada, Reno, and approved by the local IACUC committee (#00701).
Mouse phenotyping
Muscle physiology (
Immunoassay for IL-6 quantification
IL-6 quantification was performed by the Immune Assessment Core (University of California, Los Angeles) using the Luminex Multiplexed Technology, as per manufacturer’s instructions, and the Mouse Cytokine/Chemokine (32-plex) panel.
Statistical analysis for mouse work
Multiple comparison analyses were performed with one-way ANOVA with uncorrected Fisher’s LSD for muscle physiology data and Kruskal-Wallis for IL-6 quantification data using GraphPad Prism 8.2.1. Statistical significance was considered according to the following
RESULTS
Patient demographical and clinical data
Out of the 136 patients initially included, the final cohort was composed of 100 FSHD1 adults, 51 males and 49 females (Table 1) after applying exclusion criteria. The age at disease onset ranged from 1 to 76 years old (mean: 31.7±17.8), the age at examination from 16 to 84 (mean: 58.0±16.9), and the disease duration from 1 to 69 years (mean: 26.4±16.7). The age at examination and disease duration did not differ significantly between males and females (Table 1). Overall, the 4qA D4Z4 RUs ranged from 2 to 10 (mean: 6.2±1.8). The female group had a larger 4qA D4Z4 contraction than males (5.8 RUs±2 versus 6.7 RUs±1.4) (Table 1).
Patient demographic and clinical characteristics
Data expressed as means±SD. RUs: Repeat Units, MMT: Manual Muscle testing, CSS: Clinical Severity Score.
The MMT sum score ranged from 30 to 140 (mean: 102.2±23.8), with female more severely affected than men (
Cytokine profile in human sera
The cytokine profile in human sera was determined for 20 soluble proteins. Levels were determined for GM-CSF, IFN-gamma, IL-5, IL-6, IL-7, IL-8, IL-10, IL-12p40, IL-15, IL-16, IL-17, TNF-alpha, TNF-beta, and VEGF. IL-1-alpha, IL-1-beta, IL-2, IL-4, IL-12p70, and IL-13 were below the detection level in more than 20%of patients and were excluded from further analysis. Spearman’s correlation coefficient was computed between the 14 reliably detectable cytokines and MMT sum score, Brooke and Vignos scores, CSS, and age-corrected CSS, to investigate a possible association between serum cytokine levels and disease severity. After correction for multiple testing, serum IL-6 was the sole cytokine which levels correlated negatively with MMT sum score (

Correlations between serum cytokine levels and clinical scores in FSHD1. Heat maps of Spearman’s correlation coefficient (Spearman R) and False Discovery Rate (FDR) using Benjamini and Hochberg method for cytokines and clinical scores in all patients (a.), males (b.), and females (c.).
More precisely, in both male and female patients, serum IL-6 levels were correlated with MMT sum score (Fig. 2a, respectively

Correlations between serum IL-6 levels and clinical scores in FSHD1. Scatter plot representations of serum IL-6 levels versus MMT sum score (a.), Brooke score (b.), Vignos score (c.), clinical severity score (CSS) (d.), and age-corrected CSS (e.) in all patients, males, and females. Spearman R coefficients and
Our data also revealed alterations in the mean serum levels of IL-6, depending on the clinical severity. No differences were found in the level of IL-6 between the males and female groups, but serum IL-6 levels were significantly higher in patients presenting a CSS > 6 than those with a CSS≤6 (

Comparison of serum IL-6 levels with clinical severity in FSHD1 and with control. a. Scatter plot representation of serum IL-6 levels in the different groups according to clinical severity. A significant difference in serum IL-6 levels was obtained between patients with a CCS≤6 and or > 6 in the overall population (
To further confirm IL-6 as a severity biomarker in FSHD1, we have compared the level of serum IL-6 between FSHD1 patients and unrelated healthy control. The age at the exam for the control ranged from 46 to 71 (mean: 54.9±6.4), with a similar male/female ratio compare to our patients’ cohort (50%male and 50%females for control VS 51%males and 49%females for FSHD1 patients). No significant difference was found in the mean age between control and patients (
Our results showed that IL-6 levels are increased in the FSHD1 population compared to healthy control, and higher IL-6 levels reach more affected patients.
Cytokine profile in FSHD-like transgenic mice
To confirm IL-6 as a

FSHD-like mouse model: IL-6 levels in the serum and muscle.
DISCUSSION
FSHD is a heterogeneous disease characterized by high variability in the age at onset, progression, and severity. The precise FSHD pathophysiology is still unknown, but a unifying model has emerged implicating epigenetic derepression caused by a critical contraction in the number of D4Z4 macrosatellite repeats on chromosome 4q35, the aberrant reactivation of the
Previous studies used multiplex assay for a search of FSHD biomarkers. Statland and colleagues have used a microsphere-based immune-fluorescent assay of 243 markers (Myriad, Human Discovery MAP 250, v2.0) and found seven biomarkers with a concentration different between subjects with FSHD and control [12]. The biomarkers identified were in the plasminogen, inflammatory, and wound healing pathways. In this study on serum of 22 FSHD patients, the authors found a significantly increased inflammatory biomarkers (CCL2, CD40LG, and CD40 antigen) in FSHD patients than healthy control. Still, they could not detect inflammatory cytokines such as IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and TNF-α although those cytokines have been previously reported to be differentially expressed in FSHD patients [8, 11]. This discrepancy can be explained by the small size of the samples and the analysis methods, as correction for a false discovery rate of 5%in such a small sample will likely discard many biomarkers [12].
Another study conducted by Petek and colleagues used a high-throughput SomaLogic proteomics platform of 1129 proteins to identify serum proteins with levels that correlate with FSHD severity in a cross-sectional study of two independent cohorts [17]. In this study, the authors identified 66 proteins with a concentration higher in FSHD patients than control and four proteins among the 66 with a concentration correlating with disease severity. However, these biomarkers correlated when CSS < 6 but failed to correlate when CSS > 6, suggested that they can’t be used as severity biomarkers in FSHD. Further, despite a significantly higher concentration, no correlation was found between proteins involved in inflammation and the severity of the disease. Lastly, this study didn’t identify cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, and TNF-α; [8, 11]) or proteins (CCL2, CD40LG, and CD40 antigen, [12]) that were previously reported to be differentially expressed in FSHD compare to control.
The present study is the first to identify any reliable serum biomarker of disease severity in subsets of FSHD1 patients. This finding was made possible by the clinical and biological characterization of 100 FSHD1 patients –among whom 51 were males –therefore assuring an adequate power to detect statistically significant differences. Our results clearly identified IL-6 as the sole cytokine showing a correlation with multiple validated clinical severity scores.
Numerous studies have reported an increase in IL-6 levels in neuromuscular diseases, including Duchene muscular dystrophy [18], Myositis [19], or Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) [20]. IL-6 levels are used as a disease progression biomarker in the IL6R358Ala variant groups in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients [20]. An increased IL-6 secretion by peripheral blood mononuclear cells [8] and increased serum IL-6 levels [11] in FSHD1 patients have also been reported. However, IL-6 role in neuromuscular pathophysiology is still poorly understood. IL-6 has pleiotropic roles as a pro-inflammatory cytokine when secreted by innate immune cells, but IL-6 can also be produced by non-immune cells, including fibroblasts, vascular endothelial cells, and skeletal muscle cells [21]. In this case, IL-6 is a pivotal myokine for muscle repair [22], muscle wasting, exercise, and aging [23]. In skeletal muscle, IL-6 is produced by satellite cells, myofibers, and neutrophils [24] and can have a dual role. On the one hand, IL-6-STAT3 signaling was shown to impair satellite cell self-renewal in aged muscle, specifically [25], and promote myogenic lineage progression during muscle repair [26]. Conversely, experimental evidence implicated IL-6 in promoting satellite cell proliferation during hypertrophic muscle growth [27]. Therefore, IL-6 production in neuromuscular diseases can represent either a muscle-derived auto-repair mechanism [22] or a mediator of immune damage [28] and have to be elucidated.
Nevertheless, to our knowledge, our study is the first to link IL-6 levels and FSHD1 severity. Indeed, our results showed that among the 20 cytokines tested, IL-6 was the only one with concentrations strongly correlated with several well-established clinical severity and functional scores (MMT sum core, Brooke score, Vignos score, and CSS) in the overall FSHD1 population in both male and female subsets. Further, IL-6 levels are higher in the FSHD1 population compare to healthy control and follow disease severity, as more affected patients present increased IL-6 levels compare to less affected patients. The differences between our study and others can be explained by the more significant number of patients included in our study and the analysis method of biomarkers. We analyzed serum cytokine using the MSD technic with ultra-low detection limits and provides up to five logs of linear dynamic range. In contrast, others have used Luminex-based assay [12] or proteomics platform [17]. Our patients’ results were further confirmed by analyzing the FSHD-like mouse model, where serum and muscular IL-6 levels increased with the disease severity and
