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1.
Synemin is a unique, very large intermediate filament (IF) protein present in all types of muscle cells, which forms heteropolymeric intermediate filaments (IFs) with the major IF proteins desmin and/or vimentin. We show herein that tissue-purified avian synemin directly interacts with both dystrophin and utrophin, and that specific expressed regions of both of the mammalian (human) synemin isoforms (alpha-synemin and beta-synemin) directly interact with specific expressed domains/regions of the dystrophin and utrophin molecules. Mammalian synemin is also shown to colocalize with dystrophin within muscle cell cultures. These results indicate that synemin is an important IF protein in muscle cells that helps fortify the linkage between the peripheral layer of cellular myofibrils and the costameric regions located along the sarcolemma and the sarcolemma region located within the neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions (NMJs and MTJs).  相似文献   

2.
Synemin is a unique cytoplasmic intermediate filament protein for which there is limited understanding of its exact cellular functions. The single human synemin gene encodes at least two splice variants named α-synemin and β-synemin, with the larger α-synemin containing an additional 312 amino acid insert within the C-terminal tail domain. We report herein that, by using the entire tail domain of the smaller β-synemin as the bait in a yeast two-hybrid screen of a human skeletal muscle cDNA library, the LIM domain protein zyxin was identified as an interaction partner for human synemin. The synemin binding site in human zyxin was subsequently mapped to the C-terminal three tandem LIM-domain repeats, whereas the binding site for zyxin within β-synemin is within the C-terminal 332 amino acid region (SNβTII) at the end of the long tail domain. Transient expression of SNβTII within mammalian cells markedly reduced zyxin protein level, blocked localization of zyxin at focal adhesion sites and resulted in decreased cell adhesion and increased motility. Knockdown of synemin expression with siRNAs within mammalian cells resulted in significantly compromised cell adhesion and cell motility. Our results suggest that synemin participates in focal adhesion dynamics and is essential for cell adhesion and migration.  相似文献   

3.
Synemin is a cytoskeletal protein originally identified as an intermediate filament (IF)-associated protein because of its colocalization and copurification with the IF proteins desmin and vimentin in muscle cells. Our sequencing studies have shown that synemin is an unusually large member (1,604 residues, 182,187 Da) of the IF protein superfamily, with the majority of the molecule consisting of a long C-terminal tail domain. Molecular interaction studies demonstrate that purified synemin interacts with desmin, the major IF protein in mature muscle cells, and with alpha-actinin, an integral myofibrillar Z-line protein. Furthermore, expressed synemin rod and tail domains interact, respectively, with desmin and alpha-actinin. Analysis of endogenous protein expression in SW13 clonal lines reveals that synemin is coexpressed and colocalized with vimentin IFs in SW13.C1 vim+ cells but is absent in SW13.C2 vim- cells. Transfection studies indicate that synemin requires the presence of another IF protein, such as vimentin, in order to assemble into IFs. Taken in toto, our results suggest synemin functions as a component of heteropolymeric IFs and plays an important cytoskeletal cross-linking role by linking these IFs to other components of the cytoskeleton. Synemin in striated muscle cells may enable these heterofilaments to help link Z-lines of adjacent myofibrils and, thereby, play an important role in cytoskeletal integrity.  相似文献   

4.
Intermediate filament (IF) proteins are constituents of the cytoskeleton, conferring resistance to mechanical stress, and are encoded by a dispersed multigene family. In man we have identified two isoforms (180 and 150 kDa) of the IF protein synemin. Synemin alpha and beta have a very short N-terminal domain of 10 amino acids and a long C-terminal domain consisting of 1243 amino acids for the alpha isoform and 931 amino acids for the beta isoform. An intronic sequence of the synemin beta isoform is used as a coding sequence for synemin alpha. Both mRNA isoforms (6.5 and 7.5 kb) result from alternative splicing of the same gene, which has been assigned to human chromosome 15q26.3. Analyses by Northern and Western blot revealed that isoform beta is the predominant isoform in striated muscles, whereas both isoforms (alpha and beta) are present in almost equal quantities in smooth muscles. Co-transfection and immunolabeling experiments indicate that both synemin isoforms are incorporated with desmin to form heteropolymeric IFs. Furthermore synemin and desmin are found aggregated together in certain pathological situations.  相似文献   

5.
Synemin is a large intermediate filament (IF) protein that has been identified in all types of muscle cells in association with desmin- and/or vimentin-containing IFs. Our previous studies (Bellin, R. M., Sernett, S. W., Becker, B., Ip, W., Huiatt, T. W., and Robson, R. M. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 29493-29499) demonstrated that synemin forms heteropolymeric IFs with major IF proteins and contains a binding site for the myofibrillar Z-line protein alpha-actinin. By utilizing blot overlay assays, we show herein that synemin also interacts with the costameric protein vinculin. Furthermore, extensive assays utilizing the Gal4 yeast two-hybrid system demonstrate interactions of synemin with desmin and vimentin and additionally define more precisely the protein subdomains involved in the synemin/alpha-actinin and synemin/vinculin interactions. The C-terminal approximately 300-amino acid region of synemin binds to the N-terminal head and central rod domains of alpha-actinin and the approximately 150-amino acid C-terminal tail of vinculin. Overall, these interactions indicate that synemin may anchor IFs to myofibrillar Z-lines via interactions with alpha-actinin and to costameres at the sarcolemma via interactions with vinculin and/or alpha-actinin. These linkages would enable the IFs to directly link all cellular myofibrils and to anchor the peripheral layer of myofibrils to the costameres.  相似文献   

6.
Synemin is a very large, unique member of the IF (intermediate filament) protein superfamily. Association of synemin with the major IF proteins, desmin and/or vimentin, within muscle cells forms heteropolymeric IFs. We have previously identified interactions of avian synemin with alpha-actinin and vinculin. Avian synemin, however, is expressed as only one form, whereas human synemin is expressed as two major splice variants, namely alpha- and beta-synemins. The larger alpha-synemin contains an additional 312-amino-acid insert (termed SNTIII) located near the end of the long C-terminal tail domain. Whether alpha- and beta-synemins have different cellular functions is unclear. In the present study we show, by in vitro protein-protein interaction assays, that SNTIII interacts directly with both vinculin and metavinculin. Furthermore, SNTIII interacts with vinculin in vivo, and this association is promoted by PtdIns(4,5)P(2). SNTIII also specifically co-localizes with vinculin within focal adhesions when transiently expressed in mammalian cells. In contrast, other regions of synemin show distinct localization patterns in comparison with those of SNTIII, without labelling focal adhesions. Our results indicate that alpha-synemin, but not beta-synemin, interacts with both vinculin and metavinculin, thereby linking the heteropolymeric IFs to adhesion-type junctions, such as the costameres located within human striated muscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
Targeting of protein kinase A (PKA) by A-kinase anchoring proteins (AKAPs) contributes to high specificity of PKA signaling pathways. PKA phosphorylation of myofilament and cytoskeletal proteins may regulate myofibrillogenesis and myocyte remodeling during heart disease; however, known cardiac AKAPs do not localize to these regions. To identify novel AKAPs which target PKA to the cytoskeleton or myofilaments, a human heart cDNA library was screened and the intermediate filament (IF) protein, synemin, was identified as a putative RII (PKA regulatory subunit type II) binding protein. A predicted RII binding region was mutated and resulted in loss of RII binding. Furthermore, synemin co-localized with RII in SW13/cl.1-vim+ cells and co-immunoprecipitated with RII from adult rat cardiomyocytes. Synemin was localized at the level of Z-lines with RII and desmin in adult hearts, however, neonatal cardiomyocytes showed differential synemin and desmin localization. Quantitative Western blots also showed significantly more synemin was present in failing human hearts. We propose that synemin provides temporal and spatial targeting of PKA in adult and neonatal cardiac myocytes.  相似文献   

8.
The type VI intermediate filament (IF) protein synemin is a unique member of the IF protein superfamily. Synemin associates with the major type III IF protein desmin forming heteropolymeric intermediate filaments (IFs) within developed mammalian striated muscle cells. These IFs encircle and link all adjacent myofibrils together at their Z-lines, as well as link the Z-lines of the peripheral layer of cellular myofibrils to the costameres located periodically along and subjacent to the sarcolemma. Costameres are multi-protein assemblies enriched in the cytoskeletal proteins vinculin, alpha-actinin, and talin. We report herein a direct interaction of human alpha-synemin with the cytoskeletal protein talin by protein-protein interaction assays. The 312 amino acid insert (SNTIII) present only within alpha-synemin binds to the rod domain of talin in vitro and co-localizes with talin at focal adhesion sites within mammalian muscle cells. Confocal microscopy studies showed that synemin co-localizes with talin within the costameres of human skeletal muscle cells. Analysis of the primary sequences of human alpha- and beta-synemins revealed that SNTIII is composed of seven tandem repeats, each containing a specific Ser/Thr-X-Arg-His/Gln (S/T-X-R-H/Q) motif. Our results suggest human alpha-synemin plays an essential role in linking the heteropolymeric IFs to adherens-type junctions, such as the costameres within mammalian striated muscle cells, via its interaction with talin, thereby helping provide mechanical integration for the muscle cell cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

9.
The intermediate filament (IF) synemin gene encodes three IF proteins (H 180, M 150, L 41 kDa) with overlapping distributions. Synemin M was present early with vimentin and nestin. Synemin H was found later in the nervous system and mesodermic derivatives concomitantly with angiogenesis and the migration of neural crest cells. Synemin L appeared later in neurons. A series of in vitro cell cultures were done to identify the linkage between synemin isoforms and specific cell types of the central nervous system (CNS). The neurons and glia from the brains of humans and rats were cultured and double immunostaining done with antibodies against the H/M or L synemin isoforms and neural cell types (βIII-tubulin or NeuN) or astrocyte intermediate filaments (GFAP or vimentin). In neurons of the CNS, synemin H/M were co-expressed with GFAP, vimentin or nestin in glial cells, whereas synemin L was found in neurons.  相似文献   

10.
Two major types of plaque-bearing adhering junctions are commonly distinguished: the actin microfilament-anchoring adhaerens junctions (AJs) and the desmosomes anchoring intermediate-sized filaments (IFs). Both types of junction usually possess the common plaque protein, plakoglobin, whereas the other plaque proteins and the transmembrane cadherins are mutually exclusive. For example, AJs contain E-, N-, or P-cadherin in combination with α- and β-catenin, vinculin and α-actinin, whereas in desmosomes, desmogleins and desmocollins are associated with desmoplakin and one or several of the plakophilins (PP1–3). Here we describe a novel type of adhering junction comprising proteins of both AJs and desmosomes and the tight junction (TJ) plaque protein, ZO-1, in a newly established, liver-derived tumorigenic rat cell line (RMEC-1). By immunofluorescence microscopy, cell-cell contacts are characterized by mostly continuous-appearing lines which are usually resolved by electron microscopy as extended arrays of closely spaced small plaque subunits. These plaque-covered regions are positive for plakoglobin, α- and β-catenin, the arm-repeat protein p120, vinculin, desmoplakin and protein ZO-1. They are positive for E-cadherin in cultures early on in passaging, but tend to turn negative for all known cadherins in densely grown cultures. On immunoblotting SDS-PAGE-separated proteins from dense-grown cell monolayers, “pan-cadherin” antibodies have reacted with a band at ~140 kDa, identified as N-cadherin by peptide fingerprinting of the immunoprecipitated protein, which for reasons not yet clear is modified or masked in immunolocalization experiments. The exact histological derivation of RMEC-1 cells is not known. However, the observations of several endothelial markers and the fact that all cells are rich in IFs containing vimentin and/or desmin, while only subpopulations also reveal IFs containing CKs 8 and 18, is suggestive of a mesenchymal, probably endothelial origin. We discuss the molecular relationship of this novel type of extended junction with other types of adhering junctions.  相似文献   

11.
The intermediate filament (IF) synemin gene encodes three IF proteins (H 180, M 150, L 41 kDa isoforms) with overlapping distributions. In the present study we analysed the mRNA and protein expression of each isoform in developing mouse embryos. Synemin M mRNA was present as early as E5 with vimentin and nestin. Synemin H was found later at E9 in the nervous system and mesodermic derivatives concomitantly with angiogenesis, somitogenesis and the migration of neural crest cells. Synemin L appeared later in neurons at E15. Furthermore, the synemin isoforms required different IF partners depending on the cell type to form filamentous structures. In endothelial cells, synemin H/M were found associated with vimentin and were absent in vimentin-null mice. In neurons of the peripheral nervous system of E15 embryos, synemin H/M or L were co-expressed with neurofilament, peripherin and internexin. In adult mice, our data support the existence of different subpopulations of neurons within the dorsal root ganglia: one composed of small neurons containing synemin H/M and peripherin, and another composed of large neurons containing synemin L and neurofilaments. Axons devoid of neurofilaments from mutant mice (NFHLacZ) showed an absence of the L isoform but contained H/M isoforms with peripherin.  相似文献   

12.
Bone marrow multipotent stromal cells (BMSCs) have the ability to transdifferentiate into various cell types, including: osteoblasts, chondrocytes, adipocytes, neurons, and cardiomyocytes. This study aimed to differentiate the BMSCs into cardiomyocyte. BMSCs were exposed to 5-azacytidine for 24 h. Seven days after the induction of cell differentiation by 5-azacytidine, the cardiomyogenic cells were stained by fushin and binucleated cells were counted and compared with the neonate cardiomyocyte as positive control. In addition, immunofluorescence analysis and western blot were performed using the antibodies against α-actinin, desmin, troponin T, and β-myosin heavy chain. Our results showed that there was no significant difference between the number of binucleated cells within the cardiomyogenic cell group and positive control group; however, a statistically significant difference was observed between both of these groups and undifferentiated cell group (P < 0.005). In addition, after 5-azacytidine treatment, BMSCs had a higher expression of cardiac-specific markers such as desmin, α-actinin, troponin T and β-myosin heavy chain compared with the untreated groups (P < 0.005). We concluded that 5-azacytidine is an effective inducer for the differentiation of BMSCs into cardiomyocytes and could produce a population of binucleated cells, which express α-actinin, desmin, troponin T, and β-myosin heavy chain, four markers of cardiomyocytes.  相似文献   

13.
Using a monoclonal antibody, we have detected a high molecular weight muscle protein, co-localized and co-isolating with desmin. Searching a human cDNA database with partial amino acid sequences of the protein, we found a cDNA clone encoding a 1565-amino-acid polypeptide, identified as a mammalian (human) synemin, a member of the intermediate filament (IF) protein family. Immunoblotting showed the presence of a 180-kDa polypeptide in skeletal muscle and 180- and 200-kDa polypeptides in cardiac and smooth muscles. Interestingly, synemin was also found in myoepithelial cells, which have keratin filaments instead of desmin. Moreover, synemin was also found in astrocytes of optic nerves and non-myelin-forming Schwann cells, together with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and vimentin. Blot overlays pointed to molecular interactions of synemin with desmin, vimentin, GFAP and keratin 5 and 6, but not with keratin 14. The experimental data also suggested a possible link with nebulin, a skeletal muscle protein. Purified synemin was coassembled with desmin in different molar ratios, and at 1:25, as typically found in vivo, IFs were formed which were comparable in length to desmin filaments. However, at molar ratios of 3:25 and 6:25, much shorter and irregular shaped filamentous polymers were generated. The fact that synemin is present in all four classes of muscle cells and a specific type of glial cells is indicative of important functions. Its incorporation may give structural and functional versatility to the IF cytoskeleton.This work was supported by grants from the Ministry of Education, Science, and Culture of Japan.  相似文献   

14.
Synemin, a 230-kilodalton polypeptide component of avian muscle and erythrocyte intermediate filaments, is also found in association with the vimentin filaments of lens tissue. In chicken lens cells, synemin is bound to the core vimentin polymer with the same 180-nm periodicity that it exhibits in erythrocytes. Its solubility properties are characteristic of those of intermediate filaments in general and similar to those of synemin in muscle cells and erythrocytes. Synemin appears at an early stage of lens development and undergoes a dramatic accumulation as the epithelial cells elongate and differentiate into fiber cells. In contrast to synemin in cultured skeletal muscle, lens synemin is not confined to postmitotic, terminally differentiating cells but is present in proliferative cells as well. It is lost from the fibers near the center of the lens, as are many other cellular structures including intermediate filaments. These findings provide new information about the occurrence and expression of avian synemin and new insight regarding its presumptive role as a modulator of intermediate-filament function.  相似文献   

15.
E Lazarides  D R Balzer 《Cell》1978,14(2):429-438
The extent of invariance and heterogeneity in desmin, the major component of the muscle form of 100 Å filaments, has been investigated in avian and mammalian muscle and nonmuscle cells with two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and indirect immunofluorescence. Desmin from chick, duck and quail, smooth, skeletal and cardiac muscle cells is resolved into two isoelectric variants, α and β, with each possessing the same charge and electrophoretic mobility in all three avian species irrespective of muscle type. Guinea pig and rat muscle desmin resolves into only one variant; it also possesses the same charge and electrophoretic mobility in the two mammalian species, but it is more acidic and slower in electrophoretic mobility than the two avian variants.In immunofluorescence, desmin is localized together with α-actinin along myofibril Z lines. Antibodies to chick smooth muscle desmin, prepared against the protein purified by preparative SDS gel electrophoresis prior to immunization, cross-react with myofibril Z lines in all three avian species. These antibodies do not cross-react with either rat or guinea pig myofibril Z lines. Similarly, they do not cross-react with avian or mammalian nonmuscle cells grown in tissue culture and known to contain cytoplasmic 100 Å filaments.These results demonstrate that desmin is highly conserved within avian muscle cells and within mammalian muscle cells. It is, however, both biochemically and immunologically distinguishable between avian and mammalian muscle cells, and between muscle and nonmuscle cells. We conclude that there are biochemically and immunologically specific forms of desmin for avian and mammalian muscle cells. Furthermore, within a particular vertebrate species, there are at least two separate classes of 100 Å filaments: the muscle class whose major component is desmin, and the nonmuscle class whose major component is distinct from desmin. Taking into consideration the immunological specificity reported by other laboratories for the 100 Å filaments in glial cells, for neurofilaments and for the epidermal 80 Å keratin filaments, we propose that a given vertebrate species contains at least four major distinguishable classes of 100 Å filaments: muscle 100 Å filaments (desmin filaments), glial filaments, neurofilaments and epidermal keratin filaments.  相似文献   

16.
As the dynamic properties of cardiac sarcomeres are markedly changed in response to a length change of even ~0.1 μm, it is imperative to quantitatively measure sarcomere length (SL). Here we show a novel system using quantum dots (QDs) that enables a real-time measurement of the length of a single sarcomere in cardiomyocytes. First, QDs were conjugated with anti-α-actinin antibody and applied to the sarcomeric Z disks in isolated skinned cardiomyocytes of the rat. At partial activation, spontaneous sarcomeric oscillations (SPOC) occurred, and QDs provided a quantitative measurement of the length of a single sarcomere over the broad range (i.e., from ~1.7 to ~2.3 μm). It was found that the SPOC amplitude was inversely related to SL, but the period showed no correlation with SL. We then treated intact cardiomyocytes with the mixture of the antibody-QDs and FuGENE HD, and visualized the movement of the Z lines/T tubules. At a low frequency of 1 Hz, the cycle of the motion of a single sarcomere consisted of fast shortening followed by slow relengthening. However, an increase in stimulation frequency to 3-5 Hz caused a phase shift of shortening and relengthening due to acceleration of relengthening, and the waveform became similar to that observed during SPOC. Finally, the anti-α-actinin antibody-QDs were transfected from the surface of the beating heart in vivo. The striated patterns with ~1.96-μm intervals were observed after perfusion under fluorescence microscopy, and an electron microscopic observation confirmed the presence of QDs in and around the T tubules and Z disks, but primarily in the T tubules, within the first layer of cardiomyocytes of the left ventricular wall. Therefore, QDs are a useful tool to quantitatively analyze the movement of single sarcomeres in cardiomyocytes, under various experimental settings.  相似文献   

17.
α-Actinins are actin-binding proteins, and two isoforms (α-actinin-2 and -3) are major structural components of the sarcomeric Z line in mammalian skeletal muscle. Based on human and knockout mice studies, α-actinin-3 is thought to be associated with muscle force output and high contraction velocities. However, fiber-type specific expression of α-actinin isoforms is not well understood and may vary among species. In this study, we investigated the expression of α-actinin isoforms and the difference between fiber types in rat skeletal muscle and compared it with those of humans and mice from previous reports. Soleus and plantaris muscles were analyzed immunohistochemically to identify muscle fiber types and α-actinin protein expression. α-Actinin-2 was stained in all muscle fibers in both the soleus and plantaris muscles; i.e., all α-actinin-3 co-expressed with α-actinin-2 in rat skeletal muscles. The proportions of α-actinin-3 expression, regardless of fiber type, were significantly higher in the plantaris (75.8 ± 0.6%) than the soleus (8.0 ± 1.7%). No α-actinin-3 expression was observed in type I fibers, whereas all type IIx+b fibers expressed α-actinin-3. α-Actinin-3 was also expressed in type IIa fibers; however, approximately 75% of type IIa fibers were not stained by α-actinin-3, and the proportion varied between muscles. The proportion of α-actinin-3 expression in type IIa fibers was significantly higher in the soleus muscle than the plantaris muscle. Our results showed that fiber-type specific expression of α-actinin isoforms in rats is more similar to that in humans compared to that of the mouse, whereas the proportion of α-actinin-3 protein varied between muscles.  相似文献   

18.
Disorganization of the desmin network is associated with cardiac and skeletal myopathies characterized by accumulation of desmin-containing aggregates in the cells. Multiple associations of intermediate filament proteins form a network to increase mechanical and functional stability. Synemin is a desmin-associated type VI intermediate filament protein. Neither its impact on desmin network nor how it integrates into desmin filament is yet elucidated. To gain more insight into the molecular basis of these processes, we coexpressed synemin with different desmin mutants in ex vivo models. The screening of fourteen desmin mutants showed that synemin with desmin mutants revealed two behaviors. Firstly, synemin was co-localized in desmin aggregates and its coexpression decreased the number of cells containing aggregates. Secondly, synemin was excluded from the aggregates, then synemin had no effect on desmin network organization. Among fourteen desmin mutants, there were only three mutants, p.E401K, p.R406W and p.E413K, in which synemin was not found in aggregates. This behavior was correlated to the abnormal salt-bridges of desmin-dimer as seen in silico constructs. Moreover, desmin constructs in silico and published results in literature have predicted that the salt-bridges absence in the desmin filament building prevent longitudinal annealing and/or radial compaction. These results suggest that the state of desmin-filament assembly is crucial for synemin anchorage and consequently might involve mechanical and functional stability of the cytoskeletal network.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously cloned and characterized the human synemin gene, which encodes two intermediate filament proteins (IFPs). We now show that the mouse synemin gene encodes three different synemin isoforms through an alternative splicing mechanism. Two of them, synemin H and M are similar to human alpha and beta synemin, and the third isoform, L synemin, constitutes a new form of IFP. It has a typical rod domain and a short tail (49 residues) with a novel sequence that is produced by a different open reading frame. The synthesis of H/M synemins starts in the embryo, whereas the synemin L isoform is present in adult muscles. The H/M isoforms are bound to desmin or vimentin in the muscle cells of wild-type mice. Using desmin- and vimentin-deficient mice, we have obtained direct evidence that synemin is associated with muscle intermediate filaments in vivo. The organization of the synemin fibril is disrupted in skeletal and cardiac muscle when desmin is absent and in smooth muscle when vimentin is absent. The fact that the three synemin isoforms differ in the sequences of their tail domains as well as in their developmental patterns suggests that they fulfill different functions.  相似文献   

20.
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