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1.
Specific isoforms of myofibrillar proteins are expressed in different muscles and in various fiber types within a single muscle. We have isolated and characterized monoclonal antibodies against C-proteins from slow tonic (anterior latissimus dorsi, ALD) and fast twitch (pectoralis major) muscles of the chicken. Although the antibody against "fast" C-protein (MF-1) did not bind to the "slow" isoform and the antibody to the "slow" C-protein (ALD-66) did not bind to the "fast" isoform, we observed that both antibodies bound C-protein from the posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscle. Here we demonstrate that in the PLD muscle the binding sites of these two antibodies reside in two different C-protein isoforms which have different molecular weights and can be separated by hydroxylapatite column chromatography. Since we have shown previously that both these antibodies stain all myofibers and myofibrils derived from PLD muscle, we conclude that all myofibers in this muscle contain both isoforms with all sarcomeres.  相似文献   

2.
Monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) specific for the fast (MF-1) and slow (ALD-66) isoforms of C-protein from chicken skeletal muscle have been produced and characterized. Using these antibodies it was possible to demonstrate that skeletal muscles of varying fiber type express different isoforms of this protein and that in the posterior latissimus dorsi muscle both isoforms are co-expressed in the same myofiber (17, 18). Since we had shown that both isoforms were present in all sarcomeres, it was feasible to test whether the two isoforms co- distributed in the same 43-nm repeat within the A-band, thereby establishing a minimum number of C-proteins per repeat in the thick filaments. Here we describe the ultrastructural localization of C- protein in myofibers from three muscle types of the chicken using these same McAbs. We observed that although C-protein was present in a 43-nm repeat along the filaments in all three muscles, there were marked differences in the absolute number and position occupied by the different isoforms. Since McAbs MF-1 and ALD-66 decorated the same 43- nm repeats in the A-bands of the posterior latissimus dorsal muscle, we suggest that at least two C-proteins can co-localize at binding sites 43 nm apart along thick filaments of this muscle.  相似文献   

3.
Isoforms of C-protein in adult chickens which differ in fast (pectoralis major, PM) and slow (anterior latissimus dorsi, ALD) skeletal muscles can be distinguished immunochemically with monoclonal antibodies (McAbs) specific for the respective fast (MF-1) and slow (ALD-66) protein variants (Reinach et al., 1982 and 1983). The expression of these C-proteins during chick muscle development in vivo has been analyzed by immunoblot and immunofluorescence procedures. Neither MF-1 nor ALD-66 reacted with whole-cell lysates or myofibrils from PM of 12-day-old embryos. However, both McAbs bound to peptides of 145 kDa in PM from late embryonic and young posthatched chickens. All of the myofibers in these muscles reacted with both antibodies, but the binding of the anti-slow McAb (ALD-66) diminished progressively with age and was completely negative with PM by 2 weeks after hatching. In contrast, the ALD muscle from 17 days in ovo thru adulthood only reacted with ALD-66; no binding of MF-1 could be detected at these stages. Since both fast and slow myosin light chains (LC) coexist within embryonic pectoralis and ALD muscles (e.g., G. F. Gauthier, S. Lowey, P. A. Benfield, and A. W. Hobbs, 1982, J. Cell Biol.92, 471–484) yet segregate to specific fast and slow muscle fibers at different stages of development, the temporal transitions of C-protein and myosin LC were compared during myogenesis. “Slow-type” C-protein appeared after the disappearance of slow myosin light chains, whereas the accumulation of the “fast-type” light chains occurred before the expression of “fast-type” C-protein. The pattern of isoform transitions appears to be far more complex than previously suspected.  相似文献   

4.
The expression of myosin heavy chain (MHC) and C-protein isoforms has been examined immunocytochemically in regenerating skeletal muscles of adult chickens. Two, five, and eight days after focal freeze injury to the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles, cryostat sections of injured and control tissues were reacted with a series of monoclonal antibodies previously shown to specifically bind MHC or C-protein isoforms in adult or embryonic muscles. We observed that during the course of regeneration in each of these muscles there was a reproducible sequence of antigenic changes consistent with differential isoform expression for these two proteins. These isoform switches appear to be tissue specific; i.e., the isoforms of MHC and C-protein which are expressed during the regeneration of a "slow" muscle (ALD) differ from those which are synthesized in a regenerating "fast" muscle (PLD). Evidence has been obtained for the transient expression of a "fast-type" MHC and C-protein during ALD regeneration. Furthermore, during early stages of PLD regeneration this muscle contains MHCs which antigenically resemble those found in the pectoralis muscle at embryonic and early posthatch stages of development. Both regenerating muscles express an isoform of C-protein which appears immunochemically identical to that normally expressed in embryonic and adult cardiac muscle. These results support the concept that isoform transitions in regenerating skeletal muscles qualitatively resemble those found in developing muscles but differences may exist in temporal and tissue-specific patterns of gene expression.  相似文献   

5.
Two new monoclonal antibodies (McAbs), ALD-180 and ALD-88, produced against the myosin of the slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle of the chicken are described. Their specificity for myosin heavy chain (MHC) was established by radioimmunoassay, immunoautoradiography, and immunofluorescence. They were used in conjunction with McAbs MF-14 and MF-30 (which have been characterized previously to be directed against MHC of the fast skeletal muscle) to examine the developmental changes of the chicken ALD muscle. At the 16-day embryonic, early posthatch, and adult stages the ALD muscle fibers differed in their reaction pattern with the McAbs; at the embryonic stage all fibers reacted strongly with ALD-180 and weakly with ALD-88 and MF-30; at the early posthatch stage there was a checkerboard pattern with many fibers not reacting with any of these three McAbs; and at the adult stage all fibers reacted strongly with ALD-180 and ALD-88 and weakly with MF-30. The MF-14 antibody did not react with ALD muscle at any developmental stage. The mature pattern of immunoreactivity of the ALD muscle fibers with the antibodies was established only after 9 weeks posthatch, and during this 9-week period the immunofluorescence changes were nonsynchronous. Based on immunocytochemical evidence of changes in myosin isoform expression, this study clearly demonstrates a distinctive neonatal (early posthatch) stage in the development of the chicken slow muscle.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The fiber type composition of two fast muscles of the chicken, namely, adductor superficialis (AS) and pectoralis major (PM) was examined by the histochemical myosin ATPase staining and immunochemical techniques using monoclonal antibodies (McAbs). Two new McAbs produced against the myosin of the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle of the chicken and named ALD-122 and ALD-83 were characterized to be specific for myosin heavy chain (MHC) and for myosin light chain-1 respectively. They were used in conjunction with previously reported McAbs specific for slow MHC (ALD-47), fast MHC (MF-14) and fast light chain-2 (MF-5). By the histochemical ATPase test most muscle fibers of AS and PM muscles reacted as IIA and IIB respectively. By immunofluorescent staining with the anti-MHC McAbs, ALD-122, and MF-14, the fibers of AS, muscle showed remarkable heterogeneity whereas PM muscle fibers reacted, uniformly. Differences in the myosin light chain composition of AS and PM muscles were also found by SDS-gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis with the anti-light chain McAb, ALD-83. The study clearly indicated that the histochemically homogenous (type IIA) AS muscle is composed of several subpopulations of fibers which differ in their myosin composition and that this heterogeneity of the muscle is not simply due to presence of variable amounts of slow myosin in its fibers.  相似文献   

7.
Two different C-protein variants which selectively react with either monoclonal anti-fast C-protein antibody (MF-1) or monoclonal anti-slow C-protein antibody (ALD-66) were separated from neonatal chicken pectoralis muscle by hydroxylapatite column chromatography. Myofibrils isolated from the neonatal chicken muscle reacted with both monoclonal antibodies as examined by an indirect immunofluorescence method. These observations strongly indicate that both fast-type and slow-type C-proteins are expressed in the neonatal chicken skeletal muscle. Both of them are intermingled and assembled in the same myofibrils.  相似文献   

8.
Antibodies specific for the novel 86 kd protein purified from chicken pectoralis myofibrils stained by indirect immunofluorescence the middle third of each half A-band of isolated myofibrils and myotubes. Pectoralis muscle 86 kd protein, like pectoralis C-protein, displayed a fibre-type specific distribution by being restricted to fast twitch fibres and absent in slow tonic and heart muscle fibres. This was demonstrated by immunoblotting experiments with tissue extracts and by immunofluorescence labelling of cryosections. In primary cell cultures prepared from embryonic chicken breast muscle, 86 kd protein, C-protein and myomesin were all detected in post-mitotic myoblasts where fluorescence was found in a cross-striated pattern along strands of nascent myofibrils. Fluorescence due to the 86 kd protein was restricted to myofibrils within myotubes and no significant labelling of the sarcoplasm was evident. Glycerinated fast twitch muscle fibres, after incubation with antibodies to 86 kd protein, revealed in each half of the A-band nine distinctly labelled stripes, spaced about 43 nm apart. Simultaneous incubation of fibres with antibodies against 86 kd protein and C-protein showed a co-localization of the seven C-protein stripes (stripes 5 to 11), with seven stripes of 86 kd protein. The two additional stripes (stripes 3 and 4) labelled by anti-86 kd antibody continued towards the M-band at the same periodicity from the last C-protein stripe (stripe 5). Thus, partial co-localization of two different thick filament proteins is demonstrated and the identity of transverse stripes at positions 3 and 4 attributed in part to the presence of the new 86 kd protein.  相似文献   

9.
本文报道了用辣根过氧化物酶(HRP)作为大分子标记物,以组织化学和生物化学方法观察了鸡前后背阔肌在去神经后的胞纳现象。结果表明,在去神经后发生肥大的前背阔肌和去神经后发生萎缩的后背阔肌同样都出现胞纳的明显增加。组织化学所观察的结果表明,浸泡在含 HRP 的任氏液中的有完整神经支配的前、后背阔肌只有极少数的肌纤维摄取 HRP,而在去神经的前、后背阔肌中则有不少的肌纤维内部出现 HRP 染色反应。这种反应在有的纤维表现为弥散性染色,有的表现为浓的 HRP 反应颗粒。生物化学的结果显示,去神经后的前、后背阔肌中 HRP 的相对含量分别比有神经支配的对照肌肉明显地增多54%和87%,我们在鸡前背阔肌用组织化学和生物化学所得的实验结果与 Thesleff 等人提出的关于肌肉萎缩机制的假设显然不符。本工作证实了肌肉的胞纳作用的增加并不一定最终导致肌纤维的变性和萎缩。  相似文献   

10.
After administration (1 g/kg every other day for a total of five injections) of Triton WR-1339, the tonic, anterior (ALD) and phasic, posterior (PLD) latissimus dorsi muscles of the chicken underwent distinct pathological modifications. Some of the morphological alterations in the muscles paralleled those seen after administration of chloroquine, increased autophagic vacuole formation in the ALD muscle and swelling of the sarcoplasmic reticulum in the PLD muscle, but other changes were unique to Triton WR-1339. These included loss of myofilaments and whole myofibrils, indentation of the sarcolemma as well as increased numbers of ribosomes in the ALD muscle and swelling of the T-tubular system in the PLD muscle. These results are compared with other lysosome mediated pathologies, as well as with other myopathies.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Changes of muscle weights, fiber diameters and ultrastructure were studied in the slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and in the fast posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) of the chick three weeks after denervation and tenotomy, and after combined denervation and tenotomy of the two muscles.The slow ALD muscle becomes hypertrophic after denervation (Feng, Jung and Wu, 1962). Three weeks after nerve section, wet weights of ALD muscles are increased by 60% and fiber diameters become by 30% larger than those of contralateral control muscles. In spite of this hypertrophy, degenerative changes are seen in the ultrastructure, similar to those described in denervated atrophic muscles. Areas of dedifferentiation with autophagic vacuoles and aggregates of tubules are found in superficial layers of some fibers. Disintegration of Z lines and filaments along one or two sarcomeres occurs in a number of myofibrils, especially in muscles of young animals.In contrast to denervation alone, simultaneous denervation and tenotomy of the ALD muscles results in atrophy. Decrease of muscle weights and reduction of fiber diameters are similar as after tenotomy; in both cases muscle fibers waste by degeneration and atrophy of myofibrils.The fast PLD muscles underwent extensive atrophy in all three series of experiments. Corresponding atrophic and degenerative changes of ultrastructure were found in all instances.The authors wish to acknowledge gratefully the skillful technical assistance of Mrs. M. Sobotková and Ing. M. Doubek, and editorial assistance of Miss Virginia Hamilton.  相似文献   

12.
The expression of fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms was examined in developing bicep brachii, lateral gastrocnemius, and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of inbred normal White Leghorn chickens (Line 03) and genetically related inbred dystrophic White Leghorn chickens (Line 433). Utilizing a highly characterized monoclonal antibody library we employed ELISA, Western blot, immunocytochemical, and MHC epitope mapping techniques to determine which MHCs were present in the fibers of these muscles at different stages of development. The developmental pattern of MHC expression in the normal bicep brachii was uniform with all fibers initially accumulating embryonic MHC similar to that of the pectoralis muscle. At hatching the neonatal isoform was expressed in all fibers; however, unlike in the pectoralis muscle the embryonic MHC isoform did not disappear. With increasing age the neonatal MHC was repressed leaving the embryonic MHC as the only detectable isoform present in the adult bicep brachii muscle. While initially expressing embryonic MHC in ovo, the post-hatch normal gastrocnemius expressed both embryonic and neonatal MHCs. However, unlike the bicep brachii muscle, this pattern of expression continued in the adult muscle. The adult normal gastrocnemius stained heterogeneously with anti-embryonic and anti-neonatal antibodies indicating that mature fibers could contain either isoform or both. Neither the bicep brachii muscle nor the lateral gastrocnemius muscle reacted with the adult specific antibody at any stage of development. In the developing posterior latissimus dorsi muscle (PLD), embryonic, neonatal, and adult isoforms sequentially appeared; however, expression of the embryonic isoform continued throughout development. In the adult PLD, both embryonic and adult MHCs were expressed, with most fibers expressing both isoforms. In dystrophic neonates and adults virtually all fibers of the bicep brachii, gastrocnemius, and PLD muscles were identical and contained embryonic and neonatal MHCs. These results corroborate previous observations that there are alternative programs of fast MHC expression to that found in the pectoralis muscle of the chicken (M.T. Crow and F.E. Stockdale, 1986, Dev. Biol. 118, 333-342), and that diversification into fibers containing specific MHCs fails to occur in the fast muscle fibers of the dystrophic chicken. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that avian muscular dystrophy is a developmental disorder that is associated with alterations in isoform switching during muscle maturation.  相似文献   

13.
Myoblasts from 9-day-old quail embryo slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and fast posterior and latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles were co-cultured with neurons. The presence of neurons allowed ALD-derived muscle fibres to express characteristic features of a slow muscle (occurrence of alpha' and of beta' fibres and predominance of slow myosin light chains). On the contrary, PLD-derived fibres did not differentiate into normal fast fibres (occurrence of alpha'-like fibres and absence of LC3f). These results are compared with the differentiation of ALD and PLD myoblasts in aneural condition. It is suggested that neurons can modify some phenotypic expression of presumptive slow or fast myoblasts.  相似文献   

14.
Nascent muscle fiber appearance in overloaded chicken slow-tonic muscle   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The application of a weight overload to the humerus of chickens induces a hypertrophy of anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle fibers. This growth is accompanied by a rapid and almost complete replacement of one slow-tonic myosin isoform, SM-1, by another slow-tonic isoform, SM-2. In addition, a population of small fibers appears mainly in extrafascicular spaces and, concurrently, three additional myosin bands are detected by gel electrophoresis. Five antibodies against myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms were selected as immunocytochemical probes to determine the cellular location and nature of these myosins. The antibodies react with ventricular, fast skeletal muscle and either SM-1 or SM-2, or both the slow-tonic MHCs. The antifast and antiventricular antibodies react with myosin present in the 10-day embryonic ALD muscle but do not react with myosin in posthatch ALD muscle. The small fibers in overloaded muscle contain a myosin isoform characteristically expressed during the embryonic stage of ALD muscle development and therefore are named nascent myofibers. Some of the nascent myofibers do not react with the antibody to both slow-tonic MHCs, indicating the lack of the normal adult slow-tonic myosins which are expressed in 10-day embryos. In order to explore the origin of the nascent fibers, an electron microscopic study was performed. Stereological analysis of the existing fibers shows a stimulation of numbers and sizes of satellite cells. In addition, the volume occupied by nonmuscle and undifferentiated cells increases dramatically. Myotube formation with incipient myofibrils is seen in extrafascicular spaces. These data suggest that new muscle fiber formation accompanies hypertrophy in overloaded chicken ALD muscle and the process may involve satellite cell migration.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate whether immunocytochemical localization of muscle-specific aldolase can be used for fiber phenotype determination, we produced specific antibodies against the enzyme and studied its distribution in adult chicken skeletal muscles by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. Monoclonal antibodies against the myosin heavy chains of fast-twitch (MF-14) and slow-tonic (ALD-58) muscle fibers were also used to correlate aldolase levels with the fiber phenotype. The goat anti-aldolase antibody was found to be specific for the A form of aldolase, as evidenced by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, immunotitration experiments, and immunoblot analysis. The antibody reacted strongly with the fast-twitch myofibers of normal pectoralis and posterior latissimus dorsi muscles; the phenotype of these muscle fibers was confirmed by a positive immunofluorescent reaction after incubation with MF-14 antibody. By contrast, the slow-tonic myofibers of normal anterior latissimus dorsi, which react positively with ALD-58 antibody, reacted weakly with anti-aldolase antibodies. In denervated chicken muscles, reaction to anti-aldolase antibodies was markedly reduced in fast-twitch fibers, although reaction to MF-14 was not diminished. By contrast, in dystrophic muscle, fast-twitch fibers showed reduced reactivity to anti-aldolase and marked to moderate reduction in MF-14 reactivity. Our results show that: (a) in normal muscles, reactivity to anti-aldolase matches the phenotype obtained by using anti-fast or anti-slow myosin heavy chain antibodies, and therefore can serve to identify mature fibers as fast or slow; and (b) in denervated or dystrophic muscles, the intracellular expressions of aldolase and fast-twitch myosin heavy chains are regulated independently.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of denervation and direct electrical stimulation upon the activity and the molecular form distribution of butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) were studied in fast-twitch posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) and in slow-tonic anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscles of newly hatched chicken. In PLD muscle, denervation performed at day 2 substantially reduced the rate of rapid decrease of BuChE specific activity which takes place during normal development, whereas in the case of ALD muscle little change was observed. Moreover, the asymmetric forms which were dramatically reduced in denervated PLD muscle were virtually absent in denervated ALD muscle at day 14. Denervated PLD and ALD muscles were stimulated from day 4 to day 14 of age. Two patterns of stimulation were applied, either 5-Hz frequency (slow rhythm) or 40-Hz frequency (fast rhythm). Both patterns of stimulation provided the same number of impulses per day (about 61,000). In PLD muscle, electrical stimulation almost totally prevented the postdenervation loss in asymmetric forms and led to a decrease in BuChE specific activity. In ALD muscle, electrical stimulation partially prevented the asymmetric form loss which occurs after denervation. This study emphasizes the role of evoked muscle activity in the regulation of BuChE asymmetric forms in the fast PLD muscle and the differential response of denervated slow and fast muscles to electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

17.
Differentiation of slow and fast muscles in chickens   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
1. The development of the characteristic histochemical appearance of the slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and fast posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) was studied in chickens during embryonic development as well as during regeneration of minced muscle. 2. During embryonic development the activity of the oxidative enzyme succinic dehydrogenase (SDH) is higher in the slow ALD muscle already at 16 days of incubation. At this time the fast PLD has a higher activity of the glycolytic enzyme, phosphorylase. Although the histochemical appearance of the two types of muscle is already different at 16 days, their contractile speeds are still similar. No difference in myosin ATP-ase was found in the two muscles in young embryos but in 20-day old embryos the two muscles became distinctly different when stained for this enzyme. 3. When PLD muscles in hatched chickens redeveloped during regeneration in place of ALD the histochemical characteristics of the regenerated muscle resembled ALD, and when ALD regenerated in place of PLD it resembled PLD. 4. It is concluded that the histochemical characteristics of slow and fast muscles become determined during early development, even before any difference in contractile properties can be detected and that they are determined by the nerve.  相似文献   

18.
Following denervation, ultrastructural alterations were observed in the tonic, anterior (ALD) and phasic posterior (PLD) latissimus dorsi muscles of the chicken. In the ALD muscle these changes were characteristic of both degeneration and regeneration, while in the PLD muscle, the changes were characteristic only of degeneration. Acid phosphatase positive structures, which included dense bodies in the ALD and PLD as well as T-tubules in the PLD, were observed intact with no evidence of release of enzyme into the sarcoplasm. No evidence of an increase in the number of autophagic vacuoles was found. The morphological evidence presented in this communication does not support the hypothesis that lysosomes are involved in denervation atrophy through autophagy of muscle cell constituents.  相似文献   

19.
In the course of muscle differentiation, changes in fibre-type population and in myosin composition occur. In this work, the expression of native myosin isoforms in developing fast-twitch (posterior latissimus dorsi; PLD) and slow-tonic (anterior latissimus dorsi; ALD) muscles of the chick was examined using electrophoresis under nondissociating conditions. The major isomyosin of 11-day-old embryonic PLD comigrated with the adult fast myosin FM3. Two additional components indistinguishable from adult fast FM2 and FM1 isomyosins appeared successively during the embryonic development. The relative proportion of these latter isoforms increased with age, and the adult pattern was established by the end of the 1st month after hatching. Between day 11 and day 16 of embryonic development, PLD muscle fibres also contained small amounts of slow isomyosins SM1 and SM2. This synthesis of slow isoforms may be related to the presence of slow fibres within the muscle. At all embryonic and posthatch stages, ALD was composed essentially of slow isomyosins that comigrated with the two slow components SM1 and SM2 identified in adult. Several studies have reported that the SM1:SM2 ratio decreases progressively throughout embryonic and posthatching development, SM2 being predominant in the adult. In contrast, we observed a transient increase in SM1:SM2 ratio at the end of embryonic life. This could reflect a transitional neonatal stage in myosin expression. In addition, the presence in trace amounts of fast isomyosins in developing ALD muscle could be related to the presence of a population of fast fibres within this muscle.  相似文献   

20.
The evolution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity and AChE molecular form distribution were studied in slow-tonic anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and in fast-twitch posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of chickens 2-18 days of age. In ALD as well as in PLD muscles, the AChE-specific activity increased transiently from day 2 to day 4; the activity then decreased more rapidly in PLD muscle. During this period asymmetric AChE forms decreased dramatically in ALD muscle and the globular forms increased. In PLD muscle, the most striking change was the decline in A8 form between days 2 and 18 of development. Denervation performed at day 2 delayed the normal decrease in AChE-specific activity in PLD muscle, whereas little change was observed in ALD muscle. Moreover, A forms in these two muscles were virtually absent 8 days after denervation. Direct electrical stimulation depressed the rise in AChE-specific activity in denervated PLD muscle and prevented the loss of the A forms. Furthermore, the different molecular forms varied according to the stimulus pattern. In ALD muscle, electrical stimulation failed to prevent the effect of denervation. This study emphasizes the differential response of denervated slow and fast muscles to electrical stimulation and stresses the importance of the frequency of stimulation in the regulation of AChE molecular forms in PLD muscle during development.  相似文献   

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