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1.
We have studied the protein composition of the pectoralis superficialis muscle of genetically dystrophic (New Hampshire line 413) and normal control (line 412) chickens by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. A protein, referred to hereafter as the 30 kDa abnormal protein, was specifically detected in the affected muscle. It was purified to homogeneity, and its molecular properties were studied. It is a monomer with a molecular mass of approximately 30 kDa and an isoelectric point of about pI 8.4. We have screened by Western blotting a variety of muscles from line 412 and line 413 chickens for the presence of the 30 kDa protein. While the pattern of total protein is very similar in all cases, the 30 kDa protein was not detected in the pectoralis superficialis muscle of line 412 chickens. However, the immunoreactive bands were detected in the sartorius muscle and the tensor fasciae latae muscle from dystrophic and normal chickens. Interestingly, the immunoreactive bands of normal skeletal muscles are smaller in molecular weight than those of dystrophic skeletal muscles. To determine the early time sequence of the appearance of the abnormal protein, we studied muscles from embryos and post-hatched chickens at various ages. The abnormal protein was detected in dystrophic muscles as early as 15 days ex ovo and occurred throughout development up to six months ex ovo. Although the implication of the dystrophy-associated appearance of the 30 kDa protein in the affected muscle is not clear at present, it would be of particular interest to elucidate the biochemical functions of the 30 kDa protein in the affected muscle (pectoralis superficialis muscle) of genetically dystrophic chicken.  相似文献   

2.
The association of an altered cytoplasmic microtubule complex in cells of the dystrophic chicken was investigated. Dystrophic chickens of lines 304 and 413 were compared with their genetically matched control, 412 (obtained from UC, Davis). Explants and trypsin-dissociated tissues were prepared from breast and heart muscles of chickens at 1, 3, 7, 14, 20, 40, 80 and 120 days ex ovo. The cells were cultured for 7 days and then processed for antitubulin immunofluorescence. Over 90% of the cells displayed an extensive cytoplasmic microtubule complex, although there was significant elevation of creatine phosphokinase in the dystrophic chickens after 20 days ex ovo. In both dystrophic and control preparations, one to two distinct functionally intact microtubule-organizing centers per cell were observed. Dystrophic and control chicken brain extracts demonstrated essentially the same extent of microtubule assembly as assayed by turbidity increase and protein in sedimentable polymer. SDS-PAGE revealed no significant differences in the microtubule proteins polymerized from the dystrophic and control brains. These results suggest that no significant alteration occurs in the structure, assembly or distribution of cytoplasmic microtubules in the cells of the dystrophic chicken.  相似文献   

3.
The subcellular distribution of glycogen phosphorylase in pectoralis muscle from normal and dystrophic chickens was determined as a function of age. A substantially larger proportion of the total activity was associated with membranes cellular organelles, both mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum, in preparations from dystrophic birds. The difference could be detected as early as 2 weeks ex ovo. Interaction of phosphorylase with cellular membranes may provide a probe for the underlying membrane defect in this dystrophyl model.  相似文献   

4.
We have reported previously that the pectoralis muscle from three month-old dystrophic chickens with signs of myopathy exhibits increased calmodulin content, elevated calmodulin-specific mRNA (Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 137:507-512, 1986), and reduced sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-ATPase activity in response to calmodulin exposure in vitro (Clin. Res. 34: 725A, 1986). To determine the early time sequence for development of these abnormalities, we have studied muscle from embryos and post-hatched chickens at various ages. Quantitated by dot blot analysis, there was an approximate two-fold increase in calmodulin-specific mRNA in dystrophic muscle as early as 13 days ex ovo which was maintained throughout development up to three months ex ovo. Similarly, Ca2+-ATPase activity measured in SR membranes from chickens as early as 13 days post-hatch was also found to be resistant to stimulation in vitro by exogenous calmodulin, whereas the enzyme from normal muscle was calmodulin-stimulable. These findings suggest that the genetic lesion expressed in the avian dystrophic animal model involves the loss of normal control of intracellular calcium metabolism early in the maturation of the affected musculature and prior to appearance of disease signs.  相似文献   

5.
Two lines of genetically involved and control chickens were compared with regard to the onset of muscle dystrophy during the early stages of growth ex ovo. Definite structural and functional involvement of pectoralis muscle developed within the first 4-5 weeks. In parallel experiments, microsomal membranes were obtained weekly from pectoralis muscle during the first 14 weeks ex ovo. The microsomes were studied with respect to ultrastructural features, protein composition, Ca2+ uptake and ATPase activity. Microsomal preparations obtained from all newborn chickens contain two types of vesicles: one type reveals an asymmetric distribution and 'high density' of particles on freeze-fracture faces which is characteristic of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane; the other type reveals a symmetric distribution and 'low density' of particles. The yield of 'low density' microsomes from muscle of normal birds is very much reduced as the chicks grow from 1 to 4-5 weeks ex ovo. On the contrary, it remains high in chicks developing muscle dystrophy. Ca2+ uptake and coupled ATPase activity are found to be of nearly identical specific activity in control and genetically involved newborn chicks. The specific activity of the control birds, however, increases as the chicks grow from 1 to 4-5 weeks of age, while the specific activity of the dystrophic birds remains low. Such a difference appears to be related to the relative representation of sarcoplasmic reticulum and 'low density' vesicles in the microsomal preparations. It is concluded that failure to obtain a normal differentiation of muscle cell membranes is a basic defect noted in the early growth of genetically involved chickens. This defect appears along with the earliest signs of the dystrophic process.  相似文献   

6.
We have previously demonstrated, based on comparison of homologous amino acid sequences and of two-dimensional CNBr peptide gel patterns, that the myosin heavy chain in pectoralis muscles of Storrs, Connecticut dystrophic chickens is different from that of their normal controls (Huszar, G., Vigue, L., De-Lucia, J. Elzinga, M., and Haines, J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 7429-7434). Others have shown, however, that genomic banks and mRNA complements of the control and dystrophic birds are not different. In the present studies, we have examined the hypothesis that the "dystrophic" myosin heavy chain is not a novel gene product, but is a developmental isozyme which is expressed in pectoralis muscles of adult chickens due to the dystrophic process. Two-dimensional maps of myosin heavy chain CNBr peptides were prepared from breast muscles of 17-day in ovo (embryonic), 25-day posthatch (neonatal), and adult birds of the Storrs dystrophic and of two control strains. Also, myosin and actomyosin ATPase enzymatic activities of the various preparations were determined in the pH range of 5.5 to 9.0. Analysis of the peptide maps demonstrates that the embyronic, neonatal, and control adult myosin heavy chain isozymes are distinctly different gene products with only minute variations between the respective developmental isozymes in dystrophic and control muscles. However, the pectoralis myosin heavy chain of adult dystrophic birds, which is a homogeneous isozyme population by amino acid sequences and gel patterns, corresponds to that of the neonatal-type myosin heavy chain. The ATPase properties of the embryonic, neonatal, or adult pectoralis myosins and actomyosins were not different, whether the level of specific activity or the pattern of pH activation is considered. Since the mobility of neonatal chicks (primarily neonatal-type isozymes) is not restricted, the differences in myosin heavy chain structures are part of the syndrome, but not the cause of avian muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

7.
Hereditary muscular dystrophic chickens of the Storrs strain possess two genetic disorders, muscular dystrophy (MD) and a deficient concanavalin A (Con A), a T-cell mitogen, mediated splenic lymphocyte blastogenic response. A possible amelioration of the MD phenotype in MD chickens expressing normal Con A was postulated on the basis of progeny segregating for these two traits in F2 genetic analyses. To test this possibility, testcross progeny were examined for segregation of MD and Con A deficiency traits, and for the degree of muscle destruction and Con A deficiency. The data show both traits to be inherited independently as autosomal recessive traits, and do not support any phenotypic modifications occurring in chickens expressing MD with normal Con A. In the testcross progeny, the Con A deficiency disorder is equally deficient in normal and MD progeny, and the degree of muscle destruction as measured by serum creatine phosphokinase levels is equally great in MD chickens with or without the Con A deficiency trait. The reduced numbers of MD chickens in the testcross progeny can be accounted for by chance and probably reflect losses during in ovo development.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The rates of loss of adenylate kinase and creatine kinase from the circulation after intravenous injection of homogenous chicken skeletal muscle enzymes were examined to determine the role of plasma clearance rates in determining the plasma levels of these enzymes in normal and dystrophic chickens. The rapid clearance of adenylate kinase activity (average half-life of 5 min) and the slower biphasic clearance of creatine kinase activity (average half-lives of 0.95 and 11 hr) are consistent with the elevation of creatine kinase but not adenylate kinase in the blood plasma of dystrophic chickens compared to normal chickens. The rates of clearance of these enzymes were similar in normal chickens compared to dystrophic chickens. Radioiodinated enzymes were cleared at similar, but slightly more rapid rates than the loss of enzyme activity. The loss of adenylate kinase activity from the circulation may be due in part to inactivation since adenylate kinase activity is rapidly inactivated in serum in vitro, and because no increase in adenylate kinase activity is observed in the most specific sites of clearance of the radioiodinated enzyme, the liver and spleen. The comparison of enzyme activities in press juices to the activities in high-ionic-strength homogenates of muscle tissue from normal and dystrophic muscle, indicates that adenylate kinase activity is not associated with intracellular structures to the extent that would prohibit release from dystrophic muscle tissue. These results, and those presented previously with regard to plasma levels and clearance rates of AMP aminohydrolase and pyruvate kinase in normal and dystrophic chickens (11) support our hypothesis that the rates of loss of muscle enzyme activities from the circulation are important in determining the circulating levels of muscle enzymes in dystrophic chickens. Furthermore, from the measurement of plasma levels and clearance rates of creatine kinase, it was estimated that the efflux rate of creatine kinase from dystrophic muscle tissue is 2.0% of the total breast muscle creatine kinase per day.  相似文献   

10.
PACAP plays an important role during development of the nervous system and is also involved in memory processing. The aim of the present study was to investigate the function of PACAP in chicken embryonic olfactory memory formation by blocking PACAP at a sensitive period in ovo. Chicken were exposed daily to strawberry scent in ovo from embryonic day 15. Control eggs were treated only with saline, while other eggs received a single injection of the PACAP antagonist PACAP6-38 at day 15. The consumption of scented and unscented water was measured daily after hatching. Animals exposed to strawberry scent in ovo showed no preference. However, chickens exposed to PACAP6-38, showed a clear preference for plain water, similarly to unexposed chicken. Our present study points to PACAP's possible importance in embryonic olfactory memory formation.  相似文献   

11.
Human subjects and mice have been found to have a milder progression of muscular dystrophy when the disease is associated with genotypically determined dwarfism. In this paper we describe an experimental test for reducing growth hormone in dystrophic chickens that uses rabbit anti-chicken growth hormone anti-serum (anti-cGH). Antiserum was injected daily into dystrophic (line 413) male chickens from day 1 to day 8 after hatching. Dystrophic chickens injected with anti-cGH maintained a significantly higher score in the standardized test for righting ability (P less than 0.001-0.051) from 3 to 9 1/2 wk after hatching when compared with dystrophic controls. The observed prolongation of the functional ability of injected dystrophic animals suggests that growth hormone plays a role in potentiating the symptoms of dystrophy in chickens.  相似文献   

12.
We showed previously that propylthiouracil (PTU), a thyroid inhibitor, could alleviate several major signs of hereditary muscular dystrophy in chickens. The goals of the present investigation were to: (1) determine whether a nearly athyroid condition (achieved within two days after hatching by surgical thyroidectomy plus PTU) during an 11-day period beneficially affects the dystrophic condition when followed by triiodothyronine (T3) replacement to 33 days of age; (2) determine the beneficial effects on the expression of avian dystrophy when the thyroidectomized-PTU-treated chickens received a wide range of moderate to low T3 replacement doses beginning by two days after thyroidectomy; and (3) examine the thyroid hormone receptor system in dystrophic muscle for a possible abnormality. Thyroid deprivation increased muscle function (righting ability) and reduced plasma creatine kinase activity in dystrophic chickens. The major thyroid-related abnormality in dystrophic pectoralis muscles was an increased maximum binding capacity of solubilized nuclear T3 receptors.  相似文献   

13.
The pathogenesis of the human muscular dystrophies is unknown, and several competing hypotheses have been proposed. The vascular hypothesis states that muscle fibre necrosis occurs in dystrophy as a result of transient muscle ischemia. Although abnormalities of the vascular system may be demonstrated in dystrophy, their role in pathogenesis remains obscure. The responses to serotonin (5-HT) and noradrenaline (NA) were examined in isolated ischiatic artery preparations from normal and genetically dystrophic chickens. The tension generated in response to 5-HT was greater in arteries from normal chickens than in arteries from dystrophic chickens, whereas responses to NA were similar. Analysis of the concentration-response relationships demonstrated that the dystrophic ischiatic artery was less sensitive to 5-HT than was the normal artery, although the sensitivity to NA was similar in both vessels. The results of this study are not consistent with the view that muscle fibre necrosis in avian dystrophy is a consequence of muscle anoxia. These data do demonstrate pharmacological differences between dystrophic avian arteries and arteries from normal chickens, but their presence may represent merely the expression of dystrophy in vascular smooth muscle.  相似文献   

14.
Previous analyses of experimental chick embryos of normal lineage demonstrate the inability of brachial muscles to sustain a successful union with foreign nerves derived from a thoracic neural tube segment transplanted to the brachial region at day 2 in ovo (day 2E). The present experiments were performed to determine if mutant chick embryos afflicted with hereditary muscular dystrophy would respond similarly to this experimental manipulation. Using the same criteria applied to our analysis of experimental normal embryos, our results demonstrated that dystrophic brachial muscles were capable of maintaining a compatible union with foreign thoracic nerves throughout the experimental period analysed. Significant muscle growth occurred, intramuscular nerve branches were maintained, motor endplates formed and wing motility was equivalent to that of unoperated dystrophic embryos. Thus, foreign nerves rejected by normal brachial muscles were accepted by brachial muscles of the mutant dystrophic embryo.  相似文献   

15.
Gangliosides and neutral glycolipids of muscles from normal and dystrophic chickens were studied. Total glycolipid content of the degenerating muscles was higher than the normal muscles. In addition, the myopathic muscles contained a ganglioside which was absent in the unaffected muscles from normal and dystrophic chickens. Based on the thin-layer chromatographic mobility, treatment with neuraminidases from Vibrio cholerae and Arthrobacter ureafaciens, and reactivity of the asialo-derivative towards anti-ganglio-N-triaosylceramide antibody, the dystrophic-specific ganglioside was tentatively identified as GM2. Data obtained from young and old dystrophic chickens suggested a direct relationship of this ganglioside to muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

16.
Several structural and functional properties are characterized in nucleated erythrocyte plasmalemmae of age- and sex-matched dystrophic (line 413) and normal (line 412) chickens obtained from the University of California at Davis. Plasmalemma purity is assessed through marker enzymes. Significant differences are observed in the phospholipid content between dystrophic and normal chickens. The dystrophic chicken erythrocyte plasmalemma has an increased concentration of phosphatidylserine and a decreased concentration of phosphatidylethanolamine compared with control birds. Also, a measurable and distinct polar lipid, observed only on thin-layer chromatography (TLC) plates spotted with dystrophic preparations, is visualized adjacent to phosphatidylethanolamine. These abnormalities in the dystrophic chicken erythrocyte may signal a general defect in membrane structure for chicken dystrophy.  相似文献   

17.
The pectoralis muscles of dystrophic chickens (line 413) were hypertrophic on the basis of fresh weight and fat-free dry weight. They also had greater DNA content and greater glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGD) activities. Of the parameters measured, the largest differences between pectoralis muscles from dystrophic and normal (line 412) chickens were for DNA content and G6PD activity. These parameters were 4.3- and 6.7-fold, respectively, the values for control pectoralis at 5 wk of age. The average number of nuclei per unit length of isolated muscle fiber was also greater (approximately 3-fold) for the dystrophic pectoralis. Body weight and pectoralis fresh weight, fat-free dry weight, DNA content, G6PD activity and 6PGD activity were reduced significantly in propylthiouracil (PTU)-treated normal and dystrophic chickens. Moreover, the effects of PTU were more pronounced in the dystrophic strain. Thyroid deprivation significantly improved the righting ability of the dystrophic chickens, in addition to its influence on muscle hypertrophy and body growth. Thyroxine (T4) replacement reversed the PTU effects in both strains. Of all the variables measured, total G6PD activity was the most affected by PTU treatment of dystrophic chickens and was only 16% of the control dystrophic value.In addition to the effects of thyroid deprivation on the expression of avian muscular dystrophy, we observed significant differences in thyroid-related variables in the two strains. The average thyroid weight at 4 wk and serum triiodothyronine level at 5 wk for dystrophic chickens were 65 and 76%, respectively, of the normal values. The results that we report here indicate that altered thyroid function affects the expression of avian muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

18.
Several structural and functional properties are characterized in nucleated erythrocyte plasmalemmae of age and sex-matched dystrophic (line 413) and normal (line 412) chickens obtained from the University of California at Davis. Plasmalemma purity is assessed through marker enzymes. Significant differences are observed in the phospholipid content between dystrophic and normal chickens. The dystrophic chicken erythrocyte plasmalemma has an increased concentration of phosphatidylserine and a decreased concentration of phosphatidylethanolamine compared with control birds. Also, a measurable and distinct polar lipid, observed only on thin-layer chromatography (TLC) plates spotted with dystrophic preparations, is visualized adjacent to phosphatidylethanolamine. These abnormalities in the dystrophic chicken erythrocyte may signal a general defect in membrane structure for chicken dystrophy.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
In order to gain an insight into the pathogenesis of mouse muscular dystrophy, we investigated the natural suppressor serine tRNA. The natural suppressor seryl-tRNA was distinguished from the other seryl-tRNAs on the basis of its specific property of being converted into phosphoseryl-tRNA by a tRNA kinase. On a wet-weight basis, the content of total tRNA in dystrophic muscles was 47% of that in normal muscles. Although the serine-accepting activities of tRNA were similar in muscles of 3-month-old dystrophic and normal mice, the ratio of [32P]phosphoseryl-tRNA (suppressor tRNA) to the total serine tRNA was significantly enhanced in dystrophic muscles compared with that in normal muscles. This high content of suppressor tRNA in dystrophic muscles was further confirmed by dot-blot hybridization experiments with the DNA probes CGTAGTCGGCAGGAT and CGCCCGAAAGGTGGAA for major tRNA(IGASer) and suppressor tRNA respectively. At the early postnatal age of 3 weeks, when only a week had elapsed since the first manifestation of the dystrophic symptom (hindleg dragging), the ratio of suppressor tRNA to major tRNAs in dystrophic hindleg muscles was abnormally increased. Thereafter it decreased with age in normal mice but remained almost unchanged in dystrophic mice. Consequently, at 3 months old, it was 1.7 times higher in dystrophic than in normal mice. The suppressor tRNA is now accepted to play a role in the synthesis of glutathione peroxidase. The present study showed that the content of this enzyme was abnormally elevated in dystrophic mice. Previously we had demonstrated that the docosahexaenoic (C22:6) acid content in phospholipids was decreased, possibly resulting from the enhanced oxidative milieu caused by the dystrophic condition. Thus far, the findings suggest that an increase in the contents of suppressor tRNA and glutathione peroxidase in dystrophic muscle may have been secondarily induced by such a highly oxidative state in the dystrophic condition. However, it is difficult to exclude the possibility that the natural suppressor tRNA plays a primary role in the pathogenesis of muscular dystrophies.  相似文献   

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