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1.
We have isolated a human cDNA which corresponds to a developmentally regulated sarcomeric myosin heavy chain. RNA hybridization and DNA sequence analysis indicate that this cDNA, called SMHCP, encodes a perinatal myosin heavy chain isoform. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of the 3.4-kb cDNA insert show strong homology with other sarcomeric myosin heavy chains. The strongest homology is to a previously described 970-bp cDNA encoding a rat perinatal isoform (Periasamy, M., D. F. Wieczorek, and B. Nadal-Ginard. 1984. J. Biol. Chem. 259:13573-13578). The homology between the analogous human and rat perinatal myosin heavy chain cDNAs is maintained through the highly isoform-specific final 20 carboxyl-terminal amino acids, as well as the 3' untranslated region. Ribonuclease protection studies show that the mRNA encoding this isoform is expressed at high levels in 21-wk fetal skeletal tissue and not in fetal cardiac muscle. In contrast to the rat perinatal isoform, which was not found to be expressed in adult hind-leg tissue, the gene encoding SMHCP continues to be expressed in adult human skeletal tissue, but at lower levels relative to fetal skeletal tissue.  相似文献   

2.
To investigate the molecular functions of the regions encoded by alternative exons from the single Drosophila myosin heavy chain gene, we made the first kinetic measurements of two muscle myosin isoforms that differ in all alternative regions. Myosin was purified from the indirect flight muscles of wild-type and transgenic flies expressing a major embryonic isoform. The in vitro actin sliding velocity on the flight muscle isoform (6.4 microm x s(-1) at 22 degrees C) is among the fastest reported for a type II myosin and was 9-fold faster than with the embryonic isoform. With smooth muscle tropomyosin bound to actin, the actin sliding velocity on the embryonic isoform increased 6-fold, whereas that on the flight muscle myosin slightly decreased. No difference in the step sizes of Drosophila and rabbit skeletal myosins were found using optical tweezers, suggesting that the slower in vitro velocity with the embryonic isoform is due to altered kinetics. Basal ATPase rates for flight muscle myosin are higher than those of embryonic and rabbit myosin. These differences explain why the embryonic myosin cannot functionally substitute in vivo for the native flight muscle isoform, and demonstrate that one or more of the five myosin heavy chain alternative exons must influence Drosophila myosin kinetics.  相似文献   

3.
A full length (25,000 base-pair) myosin heavy chain gene completely contained within a single cosmid clone was isolated from a Syrian hamster cosmid genomic library. Sequence comparison of the 3' untranslated region indicated the presence of a 75% homology with the rat embryonic myosin heavy chain gene. Extensive 5' flanking region regulatory element conservation was also found when the sequence was compared to the rat myosin heavy chain gene. S1 nuclease digestion analysis, however, indicated that the Syrian hamster myosin heavy chain gene exhibited expression in adult Syrian hamster ventricular tissue, as well as the adult vastus medialis, a fast twitch skeletal muscle. Expression also appears to be enhanced in myopathic relative to control hearts. This myosin heavy chain gene is neither the alpha nor beta cardiac myosin heavy chain gene, but is a unique, previously unrecognized, myosin heavy chain gene present in both myocardial and skeletal muscle tissues.  相似文献   

4.
Vertebrate smooth muscle myosin heavy chains (MHCs) exist as two isoforms with molecular masses of 204 and 200 kDa (MHC204 and MHC200) that are generated from a single gene by alternative splicing of mRNA (Nagai, R., Kuro-o, M., Babij, P., and Periasamy, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9734-9737). A dimer of two MHCs associated with two pairs of myosin light chains forms a functional myosin molecule. To investigate the isoform composition of the MHCs in native myosin, antibodies specific for MHC204 were generated and used to immunoprecipitate purified bovine aortic smooth muscle myosin from a solution containing equal amounts of each isoform. MHC204 quantitatively removed from this mixture was completely free of MHC200. Immunoprecipitation of the supernatant with an antiserum that recognizes both isoforms equally well revealed that only MHC200 remained. We conclude that only homodimers of MHC204 and MHC200 exist under these conditions. A method is described for the purification of enzymatically active MHC204 and myosin on a protein G-agarose high performance liquid chromatography column containing immobilized MHC204 antibodies. We show, using an in vitro motility assay, that the movement of actin filaments by myosin containing 204-kDa heavy chains (0.435 +/- 0.115 microns/s) was not significantly different from that of myosin containing 200-kDa heavy chains (0.361 +/- 0.078 microns/s) or from myosin containing equal amounts of each heavy chain isoform (0.347 +/- 0.082 microns/s).  相似文献   

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Three myosin heavy chain isoforms with unique peptide maps appear sequentially in the development of the chicken pectoralis major muscle. An embryonic isoform is expressed early and throughout development in the embryo. A second isoform appears just after hatching and predominates by 10 days ex ovo. A third isoform, indistinguishable from adult myosin heavy chain, predominates by 8 weeks after hatching. This sequence of myosin isoform change does not, however, appear during myogenesis in vitro. In cultures prepared from embryonic myoblasts only embryonic myosin heavy chain is expressed. This is true even in cultures maintained for 30 days. Myosin light chain expression also changes in vivo with a progressive increase in fast light chain 3 accumulation. In vitro, however, this shift to increasing fast light chain 3 accumulation does not occur. The results indicate that the myosin heavy chain and light chain pattern observed in vitro is identical to that of the embryonic muscle and that the conditions necessary for the shift in expression to a more mature myosin phenotype are not present in myogenic cultures. These cultures are therefore potentially of great value in probing further the neural and humoral determinants of muscle fiber maturation and growth.  相似文献   

7.
In the present study we have investigated the reactivity of rat muscle to a specific monoclonal antibody directed against alpha cardiac myosin heavy chain. Serial cross sections of rat hindlimb muscles from the 17th day in utero to adulthood, and after neonatal denervation and de-efferentation, were studied by light microscope immunohistochemistry. Staining with anti-alpha myosin heavy chain was restricted to intrafusal bag fibres in all specimens studied. Nuclear bag2 fibres were moderately to strongly stained in the intracapsular portion and gradually lost their reactivity towards the ends, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres were stained for a short distance in each pole. Nuclear bag2 fibres displayed reactivity to anti-alpha myosin heavy chain from the 21st day of gestation, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres only acquired reactivity to anti-alpha myosin heavy chain three days after birth. After neonatal de-efferentation, the reactivity of nuclear bag2 fibres to anti-alpha myosin heavy chain was decreased and limited to a shorter portion of the fibre, whereas nuclear bag1 fibres were unreactive. We showed that a myosin heavy chain isoform hitherto unknown for skeletal muscle is specifically expressed in rat nuclear bag fibres. These findings add further complexity to the intricate pattern of isomyosin expression in intrafusal fibres. Furthermore, we show that motor innervation influences the expression of this isomyosin along the length of the fibres.  相似文献   

8.
Isolation of a non-muscle myosin heavy chain gene from Acanthamoeba   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
We have isolated a non-muscle myosin heavy chain gene from Acanthamoeba castellanii using as a heterologous probe a sarcomeric myosin heavy chain gene from Caenorhabditis elegans. The amoeba genomic clone has been tentatively identified as containing a myosin II heavy chain gene based on hybridization to a 5300-nucleotide RNA species, hybrid selection of a mRNA encoding a 185-kDa polypeptide, specific immunoprecipitation of this polypeptide with antiserum to myosin II, and an exact match between the DNA sequence and a carboxyl-terminal myosin II peptide previously sequenced by protein chemical methods (C?té, G.P., Robinson, E.A., Appella, E., and Korn, E. D. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 12781-12787). We also sequenced a region of the gene whose deduced amino acid sequence shows strong homology with that region of muscle myosins which is thought to be involved in nucleotide binding. These results indicate that the amoeba genomic clone contains at least 90% of the coding information for the 185-kDa heavy chain polypeptide and that the bulk of the gene contains very little intron DNA. Genomic blots of amoeba DNA probed with a portion of this myosin gene indicate the presence of additional highly related sequences within the amoeba genome.  相似文献   

9.
We have completely sequenced a gene encoding the heavy chain of myosin II, a nonmuscle myosin from the soil ameba Acanthamoeba castellanii. The gene spans 6 kb, is split by three small introns, and encodes a 1,509-residue heavy chain polypeptide. The positions of the three introns are largely conserved relative to characterized vertebrate and invertebrate muscle myosin genes. The deduced myosin II globular head amino acid sequence shows a high degree of similarity with the globular head sequences of the rat embryonic skeletal muscle and nematode unc 54 muscle myosins. By contrast, there is no unique way to align the deduced myosin II rod amino acid sequence with the rod sequence of these muscle myosins. Nevertheless, the periodicities of hydrophobic and charged residues in the myosin II rod sequence, which dictate the coiled-coil structure of the rod and its associations within the myosin filament, are very similar to those of the muscle myosins. We conclude that this ameba nonmuscle myosin shares with the muscle myosins of vertebrates and invertebrates an ancestral heavy chain gene. The low level of direct sequence similarity between the rod sequences of myosin II and muscle myosins probably reflects a general tolerance for residue changes in the rod domain (as long as the periodicities of hydrophobic and charged residues are largely maintained), the relative evolutionary "ages" of these myosins, and specific differences between the filament properties of myosin II and muscle myosins. Finally, sequence analysis and electron microscopy reveal the presence within the myosin II rodlike tail of a well-defined hinge region where sharp bending can occur. We speculate that this hinge may play a key role in mediating the effect of heavy chain phosphorylation on enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

10.
The present study used muscle histochemistry and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of native myosin and myosin heavy chains to establish a correlation, if any, between chiropteran histochemical fiber types and myosin isoform composition. Histochemical analysis of the primary flight muscle, the pectoralis profundus, documented the presence of a single histochemical fiber type, here termed Type II. Electrophoresis of native myosin isolated from pectoralis muscle yielded a single isoform that comigrated with the FM-3 isoform of rat diaphragm. Heavy chain analysis of the Myotis pectoralis demonstrated a single heavy chain with comparable electrophoretic mobility to rat IIa myosin heavy chain. These data demonstrate unique histochemical and biochemical homogeneity in the myosin composition of the pectoralis muscle of Myotis lucifugus. Thus this muscle is extremely specialized for flight at histochemical, morphologic, and molecular levels. These data contrast with the mixed myosin and histochemical fiber types found in other mammals, as well as in other muscles of Myotis lucifugus.  相似文献   

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12.
Vertebrate myosin heavy chains (MHC) are represented by multiple genes that are expressed in a spatially and temporally distinct pattern during development. In order to obtain molecular probes for developmentally regulated human MHC isoforms, we used monoclonal antibodies to screen an expression cDNA library constructed from primary human myotube cultures. A 3.4 kb cDNA was isolated that encodes one of the first MHCs to be transcribed in human skeletal muscle development. A portion of the corresponding gene encoding this isoform has also been isolated. Expression of this embryonic MHC is a hallmark of muscle regeneration after birth and is a characteristic marker of human muscular dystrophies. During normal human development, expression is restricted to the embryonic period of development prior to birth. In primary human muscle cell cultures, devoid of other cell types, mRNA accumulation begins as myotubes form, reaches a peak 2 days later and declines to undetectable levels within 10 days. The expression of the protein encoded by the embryonic skeletal MHC gene follows a similar time course, lagging behind the mRNA by approximately two days. Thus, expression of the human embryonic gene is efficiently induced and then repressed in cultured muscle cells, as it is in muscle tissue. The study of the regulation of a human MHC isoform with a central role in muscle development and in muscle regeneration in disease states is therefore amendable to analysis at a molecular level.  相似文献   

13.
Human myosin heavy chains are encoded by a multigene family consisting of at least 10 members. A gene-specific oligonucleotide has been used to isolate the human beta myosin heavy chain gene from a group of twelve nonoverlapping genomic clones. We have shown that this gene (which is expressed in both cardiac and skeletal muscle) is located 3.6kb upstream of the alpha cardiac myosin gene. We find that DNA sequences located upstream of rat and human alpha cardiac myosin heavy chain genes are very homologous over a 300bp region. Analogous regions of two other myosin genes expressed in different muscles (cardiac and skeletal) show no such homology to each other. While a human skeletal muscle myosin heavy chain gene cluster is located on chromosome 17, we show that the beta and alpha human cardiac myosin heavy chain genes are located on chromosome 14.  相似文献   

14.
We have isolated a cDNA that encodes the human regulatory myosin light chain isoform predominant in adult atrial muscle. The cDNA contains an open reading frame of 175 amino acids and encodes a hydrophilic protein of a largely helical structure with two potential phosphorylation sites. The protein is different from any other regulatory myosin light chain so far described and is the product of a previously uncharacterized single copy gene. An isoform-specific probe was used to analyze the expression of this isoform in adult muscle and in cardiac and skeletal muscle development in vivo and in vitro. Parallel analysis of the corresponding human alkali myosin light chain (predominant in adult atrium) showed that both isoforms are expressed in early heart development, in both atrium and ventricle. Although the atrial alkali light chain is expressed throughout embryonic striated muscle development, the regulatory myosin light chain was not detected in skeletal myogenesis in vivo or in vitro. Thus the atrial isoforms are not universally or exclusively "paired" and can be independently regulated. We propose that the manner in which these particular isoforms fulfill the functional requirements of the muscle at different developmental times may have direct impact on their regulation.  相似文献   

15.
Numerous muscle lineages are formed during myogenesis within both slow- and fast-specific cell groups. In this study, we show that six fast muscle–specific myosin heavy chain genes have unique expression patterns in the zebrafish embryo. The expression of tail-specific myosin heavy chain (fmyhc2.1) requires wnt signaling and is essential for fast muscle organization within the tail. Retinoic acid treatment results in reduced wnt signaling, which leads to loss of the fmyhc2.1 domain. Retinoic acid treatment also results in a shift of muscle identity within two trunk domains defined by expression of fmyhc1.2 and fmyhc1.3 in favor of the anteriormost myosin isoform, fmyhc1.2. In summary, we identify new muscle domains along the anteroposterior axis in the zebrafish that are defined by individual nonoverlapping, differentially regulated expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Cytoplasmic myosin from Drosophila melanogaster   总被引:20,自引:6,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
Myosin is identified and purified from three different established Drosophila melanogaster cell lines (Schneider's lines 2 and 3 and Kc). Purification entails lysis in a low salt, sucrose buffer that contains ATP, chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, precipitation with actin in the absence of ATP, gel filtration in a discontinuous KI-KCl buffer system, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. Yield of pure cytoplasmic myosin is 5-10%. This protein is identified as myosin by its cross-reactivity with two monoclonal antibodies against human platelet myosin, the molecular weight of its heavy chain, its two light chains, its behavior on gel filtration, its ATP-dependent affinity for actin, its characteristic ATPase activity, its molecular morphology as demonstrated by platinum shadowing, and its ability to form bipolar filaments. The molecular weight of the cytoplasmic myosin's light chains and peptide mapping and immunochemical analysis of its heavy chains demonstrate that this myosin, purified from Drosophila cell lines, is distinct from Drosophila muscle myosin. Two-dimensional thin layer maps of complete proteolytic digests of iodinated muscle and cytoplasmic myosin heavy chains demonstrate that, while the two myosins have some tryptic and alpha-chymotryptic peptides in common, most peptides migrate with unique mobility. One-dimensional peptide maps of SDS PAGE purified myosin heavy chain confirm these structural data. Polyclonal antiserum raised and reacted against Drosophila myosin isolated from cell lines cross-reacts only weakly with Drosophila muscle myosin isolated from the thoraces of adult Drosophila. Polyclonal antiserum raised against Drosophila muscle myosin behaves in a reciprocal fashion. Taken together our data suggest that the myosin purified from Drosophila cell lines is a bona fide cytoplasmic myosin and is very likely the product of a different myosin gene than the muscle myosin heavy chain gene that has been previously identified and characterized.  相似文献   

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20.
The effect of a tumor promoter, 12-O-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA), on the expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms in cultured rat cardiac ventricular muscle cells was studied. The previous preliminary report [Claycomb WC (1988): "Biology of Isolated Adult Cardiac Myocytes." In Clark WA, Decker RS, Borg TK (eds): New York: Elsevier, pp 284-287] indicated that TPA turns off the expression of myosin heavy chain genes in cultured adult cardiac myocytes. Electrophoretic and immunocytochemical analyses were carried out in the present studies. The myosin heavy chain isoform profiles of cardiac myocytes exposed to TPA at concentrations of 50-250 ng/ml culture medium for varying periods were similar to those of controls that were grown in the absence of TPA, showing predominant isoform V1. Immunofluorescence microscopy with monoclonal antibodies to cardiac ventricular isomyosin revealed the structural organization of myosin in TPA-treated cells. The organization of myosin was variable among different myocytes and within a single myocyte. Immunofluorescence microscopy was extended to the examination of the organization of alpha-actinin which did not differ from that of myosin in some myocytes. In contrast to the previous report [Claycomb, 1988], this study has demonstrated that TPA has no influence on the expression of myosin heavy chain isoforms in cultured adult ventricular cardiac muscle cells.  相似文献   

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