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1.
We have used immunocytological techniques to examine the developmental expression of the Ca2+-binding protein parvalbumin in Xenopus laevis embryos. Western blot experiments show that at least three different forms of parvalbumin are expressed during embryogenesis; the tadpole tail expresses one form, adult brain expresses another, mylohyoid muscle expresses both, and gastrocnemius and sartorius muscles express these two plus a third form. Parvalbumin (PV) is first detectable by immunofluorescence at stages 24-25 of development, a time when myotomal muscles are differentiating and contractile activity occurs spontaneously in embryos. At metamorphosis, PV is expressed in developing limb muscles. While the majority of skeletal muscle fibers express high levels of PV in both embryos and adults, a second fiber type has no detectable PV. The arrangement of PV-containing fibers is stereotyped in each muscle group examined. Histochemical staining of tadpole muscles indicate that PV-containing fibers correspond to fast-twitch skeletal muscles, whereas those without PV correspond to slow-twitch muscles. During tail resorption at metamorphosis, PV appears to be extruded from dying tail muscle cells and taken up by phagocytic cells.  相似文献   

2.
Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) display longitudinal and developmental shifts in muscle relaxation rate. This study aimed to determine the role of variations in parvalbumin content in modulating muscle relaxation. Parvalbumin is a low molecular weight protein that buffers myoplasmic Ca2+ and enhances muscle relaxation. In some fish, longitudinal variations in muscle relaxation have been linked to variations in the total amount of parvalbumin present in muscle and in the relative expression of two parvalbumin isoforms. We have demonstrated previously that anterior slow-twitch or red myotomal muscle relaxes more rapidly than that from the posterior for both rainbow and brook trout. Further, younger rainbow trout parr have faster red muscle relaxation rates than older smolts. Here we report similar results for fast-twitch or white muscle. We quantified the parvalbumin expression in red and white muscle from different body positions of rainbow trout parr and smolts and for brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) adults. There was a significant shift in total parvalbumin content of muscle: the faster muscle from the anterior myotome contained greater amounts of parvalbumin. For brook trout, longitudinal variation in relaxation rate was also associated with shifts in the relative expression of the two parvalbumin isoforms. The faster muscle of parr contained more parvalbumin. Lastly, trout white muscle tended to have higher levels of parvalbumin and greater levels of the Parv2 (relative to Parv1) isoform as compared to red muscle. Parvalbumin expression correlated with muscle relaxation rate in trout, although there were species-specific differences in the importance of altering total parvalbumin content versus shifts in relative parvalbumin isoform expression.  相似文献   

3.
A sensitive enzyme immunoassay for measurements of rat parvalbumin was established using antibodies raised in rabbits with parvalbumin purified from skeletal muscles. Antibodies in the antiserum were purified with a parvalbumin-coupled Sepharose column. The sandwich-type immunoassay system for parvalbumin was composed of polystyrene balls with immobilized purified antibodies and the same antibodies labeled with beta-D-galactosidase from Escherichia coli. The assay was highly sensitive and the minimum detection limit was 1 pg parvalbumin/tube. The assay did not cross-react with other calcium binding proteins, including human S-100a0 and S-100b proteins, rat 28-kDa calbindin-D, and bovine calmodulin. High concentrations of parvalbumin were observed in the skeletal muscles, especially in those composed of fast-twitch fibers, and in the diaphragm and tongue, but not in heart muscle. A relatively high concentration was estimated in the central nervous tissue. Parvalbumin was detected in the cerebral cortex and cerebellum of gestational 15-day fetuses. However, the levels of parvalbumin in the muscle tissues and central nervous tissue were very low in rats before 1 week of age. Thereafter, they increased sharply, reaching the adult levels by 5 weeks in most of the tissues. Parvalbumin concentrations in adult rat soleus muscle increased less than 20-fold within 10 days after transection of the ipsilateral sciatic nerve, while the concentrations in the extensor digitorum longus muscle did not change in the same period.  相似文献   

4.
Parvalbumin, a Ca2+-binding protein, was isolated from rat testis. This is the first demonstration of the protein in endocrine glands. By using a rat parvalbumin cDNA probe, parvalbumin mRNA was demonstrated in the testis, indicating that the protein is synthesized in this tissue and that testis parvalbumin is a product of the same gene as the one encoding for muscle parvalbumin. Parvalbumin was localized by immunohistochemical methods in the Leydig cells and in the acrosome region of maturing spermatids (stages 1-15). The expression of parvalbumin during testis development was followed. High parvalbumin protein and mRNA levels were found at stages of highest Leydig cell activity, i.e. at late fetal stages until birth and again around postnatal day 50. This suggests that parvalbumin may be involved in the production of testosterone in Leydig cells, a process which is highly dependent on calcium.  相似文献   

5.
Antibodies directed against purified Ca-ATPase from sarcoplasmic reticulum, calsequestrin and parvalbumin from rabbit fast-twitch muscle were raised in sheep. The specificity of the antibodies was shown by immunoblot analysis and by enzyme-linked immunoadsorbent assays (ELISAs). IgG against the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase inhibited the catalytic activities of Ca-ATPase from fast-twitch (psoas, tibialis anterior) and slow-twitch (soleus) muscles to the same degree. In non-equilibrium competitive ELISAs the anti(Ca-ATPase) IgG displayed a slightly higher affinity for the Ca-ATPase from fast-twitch muscle than for that from slow-twitch muscle. This suggests a fiber-type-specific polymorphism of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase. Quantification of Ca-ATPase, calsequestrin and parvalbumin in various rabbit skeletal muscles of histochemically determined fiber composition was achieved by sandwich ELISA. Ca-ATPase was found to be 6-7 times higher in fast than in slow-twitch muscles. A slightly higher concentration was found in fast-twitch muscles with a higher percentage of IIb fibers when compared with fast-twitch muscles with a higher percentage of IIa fibers. Thus Ca-ATPase is distributed as follows, IIb greater than or equal to IIa much greater than I. Calsequestrin was uniformly distributed in fast-twitch muscles independently of their IIa/IIb fiber ratio and displayed 50% lower concentrations in slow than in fast-twitch muscles (IIb = IIa greater than I). Parvalbumin contents were 200-300-fold higher in fast than in slow-twitch muscles. Significantly lower parvalbumin concentrations were found in fast-twitch muscles with a higher percentage of IIa fibers than in fast-twitch muscles with a higher percentage of IIb fibers (IIb greater than IIa much greater than I).  相似文献   

6.
We have shown previously that in addition to the adult myosin heavy chain (MyHC) isoform present throughout the length of each fast-twitch glycolytic muscle fibre within the pectoralis of the mature chicken, the neonatal isoform is retained in the tapered ends of these fibres. This work, however, has been the only published report of this phenomenon. Here, we tested the hypothesis that similar to the chicken, the ends of mature pigeon pectoralis muscle fibres contain developmental MyHC isoform(s). A histological stain was used to visualize endomysium to assist in the analysis of transverse sections of pectoralis muscle from four mature pigeons. Immunocytochemical techniques were used to localize MyHC isoform(s) characteristic of pigeon pectoralis development. We show that within mature pigeon pectoralis, the ends of both fast-twitch glycolytic and fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic fibre types express MyHC isoform(s) characteristic of their earlier development. Thus, we extend our findings on chicken to another species and an additional muscle fibre type. Retention of developmental MyHC isoform(s) within the tapered ends of mature muscle fibres may be more widespread than is currently appreciated.  相似文献   

7.
Tissue contents of the sarcoplasmic-reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (Ca2+ +Mg2+-dependent ATPase), of calsequestrin and of parvalbumin were immunochemically quantified in homogenates of fast- and slow-twitch muscles of embryonic, maturing and adult rabbits. Unlike parvalbumin, Ca2+-ATPase and calsequestrin were expressed in embryonic muscles. Presumptive fast-twitch muscles displayed higher contents of these two proteins than did presumptive slow-twitch muscles. Calsequestrin steeply increased before birth and reached adult values in the two muscle types 4 days after birth. The main increase in Ca2+-ATPase occurred during the first 2 weeks after birth. Denervation of postnatal fast- and slow-twitch muscles decreased calsequestrin to amounts typical of embryonic muscle and suppressed further increases of Ca2+-ATPase. Denervation caused slight decreases in Ca2+-ATPase in adult fast-twitch, but not in slow-twitch, muscles, whereas calsequestrin was greatly decreased in both. Chronic low-frequency stimulation induced a rapid decrease in parvalbumin in fast-twitch muscle, which was preceded by a drastic decrease in the amount of its polyadenylated RNA translatable in vitro. Tissue amounts of Ca2+-ATPase and calsequestrin were essentially unaltered up to periods of 52 days stimulation. These results indicate that in fast- and slow-twitch muscles different basal amounts of Ca2+-ATPase and calsequestrin are expressed independent of innervation, but that neuromuscular activity has a modulatory effect. Conversely, the expression of parvalbumin is greatly enhanced by phasic, and drastically decreased by tonic, motor-neuron activity.  相似文献   

8.
This study examines the role of a myoplasmic protein, parvalbumin, in enhancing muscle relaxation by fishes. Parvalbumin is thought to bind free Ca2+ during muscle contraction, thereby reducing intracellular [Ca2+] in muscle and speeding muscle relaxation by reducing Ca2+ availability to the troponin complex. We hypothesized that parvalbumin expression is ubiquitously expressed in fish muscle and that its expression levels and role in muscle relaxation would depend on the activity level and the thermal environment of a given fish species. Muscle contractile properties and patterns of parvalbumin expression were examined in pinfish (Lagodon rhomboides) and two species of toadfish (gulf toadfish, Opsanus beta, and oyster toadfish, Opsanus tau). Unlike another sparid (sheepshead), the active swimming pinfish does not express parvalbumin in its slow-twitch red muscle. However, both sheepshead and pinfish have relatively high levels of parvalbumin in their myotomal white muscle. Gulf toadfish from the Gulf of Mexico expressed higher levels of parvalbumin and had faster muscle relaxation rates than oyster toadfish from more northern latitudes. The faster muscle of gulf toadfish also expressed relatively more of one parvalbumin isoform, suggesting differences in the binding properties of the two isoforms observed in toadfish swimming muscle. Parvalbumin expression and its role in muscle relaxation appear to vary widely in fishes. There are many control points involved in the calcium transient of contracting muscle, leading to a variety of species-specific solutions to the modulation of muscle relaxation.  相似文献   

9.
Procedures for a rapid isolation and purification of parvalbumin (Mr = 12,600), parvalbumin-like protein (Mr = 12,800), and three other polypeptides with molecular weights of 12,400 (Component 1), 11,700 (Component 2), and 8,000, respectively, from chicken leg muscle, are described. A direct comparison of parvalbumin with these other proteins showed distinct differences in the amino acid compositions, charge, and immunological behavior. Parvalbumin has two high affinity sites for Ca2+ with a KDiss less than or equal to 10(-6) M (Blum, H. E., Lehky, P., Kohler, L., Stein, E.A., and Fischer, E. H. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 2834-2838), in contrast to parvalbumin-like protein. Components 1 and 2, and the Mr = 8,000 protein, where only low affinity sites for Ca2+ could be detected (KDiss greater than 10(-3) M). From our results it is concluded that the co-extracted proteins do not constitute isoproteins of parvalbumin. The very low affinity for Ca2+ suggests that these proteins are not involved in processes of Ca2+ transport or Ca2+ regulation as proposed for parvalbumin. Parvalbumin could not be localized within isolated myofibrils and also did not accumulate in primary myogenic cell cultures together with proteins forming the myofibrillar structure. Parvalbumin was not even detected in myotubes in which myofibrils and sarcoplasmatic reticulum were already assembled and functioning. Parvalbumin (or cross-reacting material) was detected in leg muscle and brain 1 day after hatching of the chick. Possible roles for parvalbumin are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The highly stable Ca2+ binding protein, parvalbumin, is prevalent in fish white muscle tissue. The properties of this protein make it a promising antigen for use as a specific biomarker for fish identification. Parvalbumin was purified from white muscle of an adult common snook Centropomus undecimalis using ammonium sulfate precipitation, size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and anion-exchange HPLC. Parvalbumins were characterized by the presence of an 11-kDa band following gradient-SDS gel electrophoresis and by their immunoreactivity against mouse anti-parvalbumin antibodies. Anion-exchange chromatography of the parvalbumin fraction separated from the SEC column yielded nine fractions. Subsequent analysis of these fractions by isoelectric focusing gel electrophoresis led to a total of seven parvalbumin isotypes, which may lend themselves as biomarkers in fish identification. The presence of these seven parvalbumin isotypes was confirmed independently by reversed-phase HPLC. A dilution endpoint immunoassay was developed for C. undecimalis parvalbumin using a monoclonal antibody directed against its highly conserved calcium binding site. The utility of parvalbumin isotype distribution and specific monoclonal antibodies against fish parvalbumin in species identification is discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The cellular distribution of parvalbumin immunoreactivity in the vestibular peripheral system of mouse, rat, and guinea pig was investigated by light and electron microscopy. Parvalbumin was found in all neurons of the vestibular ganglia of these species but in the sensory epithelia immunoreactivity was restricted to type I hair cells localized exclusively in the central areas. The very intense staining pattern was similar in the cristae ampullares and utricles of all three species but a faint immunoreaction was also detectable in sensory cells of peripheral areas of rat cristae. The parvalbumin-immunoreactive type I sensory cells are connected by nerve fibres of the calyx unit type which are known selectively to contain calretinin.  相似文献   

12.
13.
1. A high affinity Ca2+ binding and low mol. wt protein, parvalbumin, was purified from monkey skeletal muscle. 2. As compared with other animals, only one component and a lower content of monkey parvalbumin were found. 3. This may suggest that both the component and the content of parvalbumin decreases with biological evolution. 4. The parvalbumin was found to have a mol. wt of 11,400, a pI of 5.1, a high aspartic acid and lysine content, maximum absorption at around 260 nm, a blocked amino-terminal, an immunological distinction, 2 mol Ca2+ binding/mol, and a conformational change by Ca2+ binding. 5. Parvalbumin was shown to have alpha type properties.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Parvalbumin isotypes PA II, PA III, PA IVa, and PA IVb were isolated by chromatography from trunk white muscle of barbel and physicochemically characterized. Electrospray ionization mass spectroscopy revealed that PA II has a lower molecular weight than the other isotypes and that PA IVa and PA IVb each consist of two subforms. Isotype distribution was studied by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In adult fish, the total parvalbumin titre decreased and the isotype distribution varied from the anterior to the posterior myotomes. In the course of barbel development, the total parvalbumin titre increased rapidly as fish standard length increased from 1·3 to 5 cm; then sloped down gently as the length increased to 60 cm. At least six parvalbumin isotypes were identified, three of which are different forms (a, b, and c) of PA II. These three forms were present together at the larval stage, but PA IIc and chiefly PA IIb appeared as early isotypes, contrary to PA IIa which was present until the adult period. Later PA IVb accounted for up to 90% of the total parvalbumin content; PA III and PA IVa are minor adult isotypes. Temporal and spatial variations in the total parvalbumin titre and in the differential expression of barbel parvalbumin isotypes very likely reflected the functional requirements of the fish axial musculature according to fish size and myotome location. Physiologically, the larval isotypes could promote faster relaxation of fast fibres than the adult isotypes, and hence favour shorter contraction times.  相似文献   

16.
1. After 14 days of body suspension, fibre type composition and fibre cross-sectional area in the soleus muscle of 17-week-old male Sprague-Dawley rats were investigated. Oxidative enzyme activity of soleus motoneurones in the spinal cord was also examined. 2. After suspension, soleus muscle weight decreased by 44.2%, the cross-sectional area of SO and FOG fibres decreased by 60.4% and 58.6%, respectively. 3. The percentage of fibre types was not changed by suspension. However, ATPase activity after alkaline preincubation was markedly inhibited in FOG fibres. 4. Oxidative enzyme activity of soleus motoneurones was not changed by suspension. 5. This study demonstrates that using mature animals body suspension induces atrophy of fast- and slow-twitch fibres accompanied with the selective inhibition in ATPase activity of fast-twitch fibres, and without changes in histochemical profiles of the corresponding motoneurones.  相似文献   

17.
In muscle of the myotonic mouse mutant, 'arrested development of righting response', ADR, a reduced level of fast-myosin-light-chain-2 (LC2f) phosphorylation was observed in addition to a lowered parvalbumin content. In fast muscles, average phosphorylation levels of LC2f (LC2-P/LC2 total) were 0.76 mol/mol for wild type and 0.59 mol/mol for the myotonic mutant. The difference was not due to short-term activity prior to freezing because it was also found in curare-paralyzed muscles. Long-term treatment of genetically myotonic animals with the membrane-stabilizing drug, tocainide, led to an increase of parvalbumin content and LC2-P level. In wild-type mice, tocainide had a similar effect, leading to supranormal parvalbumin concentrations. It is concluded that both the basal level of LC2-P and parvalbumin concentration are regulated by a common factor, related to long-term muscle activity.  相似文献   

18.
The action of the tranquilizer diazepam on rat skeletal muscle showed that relaxation of isometric twitches is controlled by different processes in extensor digitorum longus (fast-twitch) and soleus (slow-twitch) muscles. Diazepam caused an increase in the amplitude of twitches in fibres from both muscles but increased the twitch duration only in soleus. The amplitude of fused tetani were reduced in both muscles and the rate of relaxation after the tetanus slowed by as much as 34% when the amplitude of the tetanus was reduced by only 11%. The slower tetanic relaxation indicated that calcium uptake by the sarcoplasmic reticulum was slower than normal in slow- and fast-twitch fibres. We conclude therefore that calcium uptake by the sarcoplasmic reticulum is rate limiting for twitch relaxation in slow-twitch but not fast-twitch fibres and suggest that calcium binding to parvalbumin controls relaxation in the fast fibres.  相似文献   

19.
The total content of myosin heavy chains (MHC) and their isoform pattern were studied by biochemical methods in the slow-twitch (soleus) and fast-twitch (extensor digitorum longus) muscles of adult rat during atrophy after denervation and recovery after self-reinnervation. The pattern of fibre types, in terms of ultrastructure, was studied in parallel. After denervation, total MHC content decreased sooner in the slow-twitch muscle than in the fast-twitch. The ratio of MHC-1 and the MHC-2B isoforms to the MHC-2A isoform decreased in the slow and the fast denervated muscles, respectively. After reinnervation of the slow muscle, the normal pattern of MHC recovered within 10 days and the type 1 isoform increased above the normal. In the reinnervated fast muscle, the 2B/2A isoform ratio continued to decrease. Traces of the embryonic MHC isoform, identified by immunochemistry, were found in both denervated and reinnervated slow and fast muscles. A shift in fibre types was similar to that found in the MHC isoforms. Within 2 months of recovery a tendency to normalization was observed. The results show that (a) MHC-2B isoform and the morphological characteristics of the 2B-type muscle fibres are susceptible to lack of innervation, similar to those of type 1, (b) during muscle recovery induced by reinnervation the MHC isoforms and muscle fibres shift transiently to type 1 in the soleus and to type 2A in the extensor digitorum longus muscles, and (c) the embryonic isoform of MHC may appear in the adult skeletal muscles if innervation is disturbed.  相似文献   

20.
Considerable knowledge regarding skeletal muscle physiology and disease has been gleaned from cultured myoblastic cell lines or isolated primary myoblasts. Such muscle cultures can be induced to differentiate into multinucleated myotubes that become striated. However they in general do not fully mature and therefore do not model mature muscle. Contrastingly, fresh and cultured dissociated adult mouse flexor digitorum brevis (FDB) myofibers have been studied for many years. We aimed to investigate the possibility of using the FDB myofiber culture system for drug screening and thus long-term cultures of enzymatically dissociated FDB myofibers were established in 96-well plates. Ca2+ handling experiments were used to investigate the functional state of the myofibers. Imaging of intracellular Ca2+ during electric field stimulation revealed that calcium handling was maintained throughout the culture period of at least 8 days. Western blot and immunostaining analysis showed that the FDB cultures maintained expression of mature proteins throughout the culture period, including alpha-sarcoglycan, dystrophin, fast myosin heavy chain and skeletal muscle alpha-actin. The high levels of the fetal proteins cardiac alpha-actin and utrophin, seen in cultured C2C12 myotubes, were absent in the FDB cultures. The expression of developmentally mature proteins and the absence of fetal proteins, in addition to the maintenance of normal calcium handling, highlights the FDB culture system as a more mature and perhaps more relevant culture system for the study of adult skeletal muscle function. Moreover, it may be a useful system for screening therapeutic agents for the treatment of skeletal muscle disorders.  相似文献   

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