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1.
Caveolin-3 is the principal structural protein of caveolae membrane domains in striated muscle cells. Caveolin-3 mRNA and protein expression are dramatically induced during the differentiation of C2C12 skeletal myoblasts, coincident with myoblast fusion. In these myotubes, caveolin-3 localizes to the sarcolemma (muscle cell plasma membrane), where it associates with the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex. However, it remains unknown what role caveolin-3 plays in myoblast differentiation and myotube formation. Here, we employ an antisense approach to derive stable C2C12 myoblasts that fail to express the caveolin-3 protein. We show that C2C12 cells harboring caveolin-3 antisense undergo differentiation and express normal amounts of four muscle-specific marker proteins. However, C2C12 cells harboring caveolin-3 antisense fail to undergo myoblast fusion and, therefore, do not form myotubes. Interestingly, treatment with specific p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors blocks both myotube formation and caveolin-3 expression, but does not affect the expression of other muscle-specific proteins. In addition, we find that three human rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines do not express caveolin-3 and fail to undergo myoblast fusion. Taken together, these results support the idea that caveolin-3 expression is required for myoblast fusion and myotube formation, and suggest that p38 is an upstream regulator of caveolin-3 expression.  相似文献   

2.
We have previously shown that calpain promotes myoblast fusion by acting on protein kinase C-alpha and the cytosolic phosphorylated form of MARCKS. In other cell types, various isoforms of calpain, PKC alpha and MARCKS were found associated with caveolae. These vesicular invaginations of the plasma membrane are essential for myoblast fusion and differentiation. We have isolated caveolae from myoblasts and studied the presence of calpain isoforms and their possible effects on signalling mediated by caveolae-associated PKC. Our results show that milli-calpain co-localizes with myoblast caveolae. Futhermore we provide evidence, using a calcium ionophore and a specific inhibitor of calpains (calpastatin peptide), that milli-calpain reduces the PKC alpha and MARCKS content in these structures. Purified milli-calpain causes the appearance of the active catalytic fragment of PKC alpha (PKM), without having an effect on MARCKS. Addition of phorbol myristate acetate, an activator of PKC, induces tranlocation of PKC alpha towards caveolae and results in a significant reduction of MARCKS associated with caveolae. This phenomenon is not observed when a PKC alpha inhibitor is added at the same time. We conclude that the presence of biologically active milli-calpain within myoblast caveolae induces, in a PKC alpha-dependent manner, MARCKS translocation towards the cytosol. Such a localised signalling event may be essential for myoblast fusion and differentiation.  相似文献   

3.
The objectives were to investigate the roles of different calpains and protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms in muscle differentiation. Concentrations of mu- and m-calpain increased significantly whereas PKCalpha and delta declined significantly during L8 myoblast differentiation. Both mu-calpain and m-calpain antisense oligonucleotides inhibited myotube formation and creatine kinase activity during L8 myoblast differentiation. These results implied that both mu- and m-calpain were involved in L8 myoblast differentiation. To investigate the involvement of calpain in regulation of PKC concentrations, mu-calpain antisense oligonucleotides were added to L8 myoblasts. PKCalpha remained unchanged and PKCdelta declined. By adding m-calpain antisense oligonucleotides instead, PKCalpha level remained unchanged and PKCdelta concentrations increased significantly during differentiation. These results suggest that PKCalpha, but not PKCdelta, is the substrate for mu-calpain and PKCalpha and delta are the substrates for the m-calpain. In addition, more phosphorylated myogenin was found in day 2 antisense oligonucleotides treated L8 cells. It is concluded that the decline of PKCalpha mediated by m- and mu-calpain is essential for L8 myoblast differentiation. The decline of PKC during myoblast differentiation may cause hypo-phosphorylation of myogenin, which in turn activates muscle-specific genes during myogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
The role of transmembrane 4 superfamily (TM4SF) proteins during muscle cell fusion has not been investigated previously. Here we show that the appearance of TM4SF protein, CD9, and the formation of CD9-beta1 integrin complexes were both regulated in coordination with murine C2C12 myoblast cell differentiation. Also, anti-CD9 and anti-CD81 monoclonal antibodies substantially inhibited and delayed conversion of C2C12 cells to elongated myotubes, without affecting muscle-specific protein expression. Studies of the human myoblast-derived RD sarcoma cell line further demonstrated that TM4SF proteins have a role during muscle cell fusion. Ectopic expression of CD9 caused a four- to eightfold increase in RD cell syncytia formation, whereas anti-CD9 and anti-CD81 antibodies markedly delayed RD syncytia formation. Finally, anti-CD9 and anti-CD81 monoclonal antibodies triggered apoptotic degeneration of C2C12 cell myotubes after they were formed. In summary, TM4SF proteins such as CD9 and CD81 appear to promote muscle cell fusion and support myotube maintenance.  相似文献   

5.
The functionally undefined Stac3 gene, predicted to encode a SH3 domain- and C1 domain-containing protein, was recently found to be specifically expressed in skeletal muscle and essential to normal skeletal muscle development and contraction. In this study we determined the potential role of Stac3 in myoblast proliferation and differentiation, two important steps of muscle development. Neither siRNA-mediated Stac3 knockdown nor plasmid-mediated Stac3 overexpression affected the proliferation of C2C12 myoblasts. Stac3 knockdown promoted the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers including myogenin and myosin heavy chain. In contrast, Stac3 overexpression inhibited the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by decreased fusion index, decreased number of nuclei per myotube, and decreased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers. Compared to wild-type myoblasts, myoblasts from Stac3 knockout mouse embryos showed accelerated differentiation into myotubes in culture as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA expression of myogenic markers. Collectively, these data suggest an inhibitory role of endogenous Stac3 in myoblast differentiation. Myogenesis is a tightly controlled program; myofibers formed from prematurely differentiated myoblasts are dysfunctional. Thus, Stac3 may play a role in preventing precocious myoblast differentiation during skeletal muscle development.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Our previous studies suggest that the cysteine protease cathepsin B (catB) is involved in skeletal myoblast differentiation (myogenesis). To test this hypothesis, we examined the effect of trapping one of the two catB alleles on the ability of C2C12 cells to differentiate. During differentiation, catB gene-trapped C2C12 mouse myoblasts (RT-27) demonstrated a similar pattern of intracellular catB activity and protein expression compared to that observed in control C2C12 myoblasts and myoblasts trapped in a gene other than catB. However, compared to control myoblast cell lines, levels of catB activity and protein at each stage of RT-27 differentiation were reduced. The reductions in levels of catB were associated with reductions in several myogenic phenotypes including reduced levels of creatine phosphokinase activity and myosin heavy chain protein, two late biochemical markers of myogenesis, and reduced myotube size and extent of myotube formation over time. Comparable reductions were not observed for myogenin protein, an early biochemical marker of myogenesis, or in myokinase activity and catB related cathepsin L-type activity, two non-specific proteins. Finally, both control and catB gene-trapped myoblasts secreted active catB at pH 7.0. However levels of active pericellular/secreted catB were 50% lower in catB gene-trapped myoblasts. Collectively, these results support a functional link between catB expression and skeletal myogenesis and suggest a role for active pericellular/secreted catB in myoblast fusion.  相似文献   

8.
Previous studies have led to the hypothesis of a possible role for the calcium-dependent neutral protease m-calpain in myoblast fusion in culture. To evaluate this hypothesis, we chose as our model, the "muscular dysgenesis" mouse (mdg), which presents in vivo and in vitro characteristics of an elevated process of fusion (Yao and Essien, 1975; Dussartre, 1993; Ashby et al., 1993, Joffroy et al., 1999). The aim of this study was to demonstrate using myoblast cell lines and muscle biopsies from this mdg mutant, that the amount of m-calpain increases significantly as multinucleated myotubes are formed. Using immunoblot analysis, it was shown that the m-calpain concentration in a dysgenic cell line (GLT) increased 3-fold compared to what it was upon the introduction of the differentiation medium. On the other hand, in a normal cell line (NLT), the concentration of m-calpain did not vary significantly. Thus, when the transition from myoblasts to myotubes was slow, and the absolute level of fusion was reduced, as in the NLT cell line, the level of m-calpain was stable. In contrast, when the process of fusion was precocious and fast, and the level of fusion was elevated, such as in the GLT cell line, the concentration of m-calpain increased during fusion. Moreover, when myoblast fusion was prevented by the addition of calpain inhibitor II, the process was reduced by approximately 93%. Taking into account these observations, it is clear from our data that the muscular dysgenesis mouse provides a relevant model to study myoblast fusion and that m-calpain is involved in this process.  相似文献   

9.
Polysialic acid attached to the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) is thought to play a critical role in development. NCAM in muscle tissue contains a muscle-specific domain (MSD) to which mucin type O-glycans are attached. In the present study, using the C2C12 myoblast system, we show that NCAM containing MSD is increasingly expressed on the cell surface as myotubes form. Polysialic acid is primarily attached to N-glycans of NCAM, and polysialylated NCAM is expressed on the outer surface of myotube bundles. By transfecting cDNAs encoding wild type and mutant forms of NCAM, we found that NCAM containing MSD facilitates myoblast fusion, and this effect is diminished by mutating O-glycosylation sites at MSD. By contrast, forced expression of polysialic acid in early differentiation stages reduces myotube formation and delays the expression of NCAM containing the MSD domain. Strikingly, inhibition of polysialic acid synthesis by antisense DNA approach induced differentiation in both human rhabdomyosarcoma cells, which overexpress polysialic acid, and C2C12 cells. These results indicate that polysialic acid and mucin type O-glycans on NCAM differentially regulate myoblast fusion, playing critical roles in muscle development.  相似文献   

10.
Many studies have demonstrated that m-calpain was implicated in cell membrane reorganization-related phenomena during fusion via a regulation by calpastatin, the specific Ca2+-dependent proteolytic inhibitor. However, the real biological role of this protease is unclear because many targeted proteins are still unknown. Using different digestion experiments we have demonstrated that desmin, vimentin, talin, and fibronectin represent very good substrates for this proteinase capable of cleaving them in fragments which are immediately degraded by other enzymatic systems. Concerning intermediate filaments, we showed that during the phenomenon of fusion, the amount of desmin was significantly reduced while the concentration of vimentin presented a steady level. On the other hand, we have conducted biological assays on cultured myoblasts supplemented by exogenous factors such as calpain inhibitors or antisense oligonucleotides capable of stimulating or inhibiting m-calpain activity. The effect of such factors on fusion and concomitantly on the targeted substrates was analyzed and quantified. When m-calpain activity and myoblast fusion were prevented by addition of calpain inhibitors entering the cells, the amounts of desmin, talin, and fibronectin were increased, whereas the amount of vimentin was unchanged. Using antisense strategy, similar results were obtained. In addition, when the phenomenon of fusion was enhanced by preventing calpastatin synthesis, the amounts of desmin, talin, and fibronectin were significantly reduced. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that m-calpain is involved in myoblast fusion by cleaving certain proteins identified here. This cleavage could modify membrane and cytoskeleton organization for the myoblasts to fuse.  相似文献   

11.
Rat satellite cells (RSC) were microinjected with purified calpastatin or m-calpain, and myoblasts from a C2C12 mouse line were microinjected with purified calpastatin. Microinjection with calpastatin completely prevented fusion of myoblasts from both sources, whereas microinjection with m-calpain significantly increased the rate of fusion of cultured RSC; 44% of the nuclei of RSC cultures were in multinucleated myotubes within 48 h after microinjection with m-calpain plus labeled dextran, whereas only 15% of the nuclei were in multinucleated myotubes after microinjection with dextran alone. Western analyses indicated that neither RSC nor C2C12 myoblasts contained detectable amounts of mu-calpain before fusion. The levels of calpastatin in C2C12 myoblasts increased as cells passed from the proliferative stage to the onset of fusion, and these levels increased substantially in both the C2C12 and the RSC cells as they progressed to the late or postfusion stage. Both RSC and C2C12 myoblasts contained an 80-kDa polypeptide that was labeled with an anti-m-calpain antibody in Western blots. The results are consistent with a role of the calpain system (m-calpain in these myoblast lines) in remodeling of the cytoskeletal/plasma membrane interactions during cell fusion.  相似文献   

12.
The calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is a G protein-coupled, seven-transmembrane receptor and resides within caveolin-rich membrane domains in bovine parathyroid cells. The proenzyme of calpain 2 (m-calpain) is a heterodimeric calcium-dependent cysteine protease consisting of catalytic and regulatory subunits. The effects of calcium on the enzyme include activation, autolysis, and subunit dissociation. Here, we examine the potential role of caveolin-1 and caveolae in regulating the cellular distribution and function of m-calpain in parathyroid cells. We show that the inactive heterodimeric forms of m-calpain are concentrated in caveolin-rich membrane fractions prepared from parathyroid cells incubated with low extracellular calcium (Ca2+(o)). In contrast, in cells incubated with 3 mm Ca2+(o), which activates the CaR and increases intracellular calcium, there is a reduction in m-calpain in association with an increase in CaR protein and phosphorylated protein kinase C alpha and beta in caveolin-rich fractions. To assess the impact of activation of calpain on CaR protein in caveolar fractions, we analyzed the effects of m-calpain on the CaR. Activation of the CaR with high Ca2+(o) induced the release of lower molecular weight fragments of the receptor into the cell culture medium, and calpain inhibitors blocked this effect. Moreover, the fragments of the CaR as well as caveolin-1, m-calpain, and alkaline phosphatase were localized in membrane vesicles shed by parathyroid cells, supporting the association of these proteins in living cells. Treatment of CaR proteins in vitro with m-calpain also resulted in the appearance of lower molecular weight fragments of the CaR. Our data suggest that localization of m-calpain within caveolae may contribute to maintenance of the enzyme in an inactive state and that m-calpain may also contribute to the regulation of CaR levels.  相似文献   

13.
Using m-calpain antibody, we have identified two major bands corresponding to the 80 kDa large and the 28 kDa small subunit of m-calpain in caveolae vesicles isolated from bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle plasma membrane. In addition, 78, 35, and 18 kDa immunoreactive bands of m-calpain have also been detected. Casein zymogram studies also revealed the presence of m-calpain in the caveolae vesicles. We have also identified Na+/Ca2+ exchanger-1 (NCX1) in the caveolae vesicles. Purification and N-terminal sequence analyses of these two proteins confirmed their identities as m-calpain and NCX1, respectively. We further sought to determine the role of m-calpain on calcium-dependent proteolytic cleavage of NCX1 in the caveolae vesicles. Treatment of the caveolae vesicles with the calcium ionophore, A23187 (1 μM) in presence of CaCl2 (1 mM) appears to cleave NCX1 (120 kDa) to an 82 kDa fragment as revealed by immunoblot study using NCX1 monoclonal antibody; while pretreatment with the calpain inhibitors, calpeptin or MDL28170; or the Ca2+ chelator, BAPTA-AM did not cause a discernible change in the NCX protein profile. In vitro cleavage of the purified NCX1 by the purified m-calpain supports this finding. The cleavage of NCX1 by m-calpain in the caveolae vesicles may be interpreted as an important mechanism of Ca2+ overload, which could arise due to inhibition of Ca2+ efflux by the forward-mode NCX and that could lead to sustained Ca2+ overload in the smooth muscle leading to pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

14.
The formation of multinucleate skeletal muscle cells (myotubes) is a Ca2(+)-dependent process involving the interaction and fusion of mononucleate muscle cells (myoblasts). Specific cell-cell adhesion precedes lipid bilayer union during myoblast fusion and has been shown to involve both Ca2(+)-independent (CI)2 and Ca2(+)-dependent (CD) mechanisms. In this paper we present evidence that CD myoblast adhesion involves a molecule similar or identical to two known CD adhesion glycoproteins, N-cadherin and A-CAM. These molecules were previously identified by other laboratories in brain and cardiac muscle, respectively, and are postulated to be the same molecule. Antibodies to N-cadherin and A-CAM immunoblotted a similar band with a molecular weight of approximately 125,000 in extracts of brain, heart, and pectoral muscle isolated from chick embryos and in extracts of muscle cells grown in vitro at Ca2+ concentrations that either promoted or inhibited myotube formation. In assays designed to measure the interaction of fusion-competent myoblasts in suspension, both polyclonal and monoclonal anti-N-cadherin antibodies inhibited CD myoblast aggregation, suggesting that N-cadherin mediates the CD aspect of myoblast adhesion. Anti-N-cadherin also had a partial inhibitory effect on myotube formation likely due to the effect on myoblast-myoblast adhesion. The results indicate that N-cadherin/A-CAM plays a role in myoblast recognition and adhesion during skeletal myogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Cyclic short-duration stretches (CSDS) such as those resulting from repetitive motion strain increase the risk of musculoskeletal injury. Myofascial release is a common technique used by clinicians that applies an acyclic long-duration stretch (ALDS) to muscle fascia to repair injury. When subjected to mechanical strain, fibroblasts within muscle fascia secrete IL-6, which has been shown to induce myoblast differentiation, essential for muscle repair. We hypothesize that fibroblasts subjected to ALDS following CSDS induce myoblast differentiation through IL-6. Fibroblast conditioned media and fibroblast-myoblast cocultures were used to test fibroblasts' ability to induce myoblast differentiation. The coculture system applies strain to fibroblasts only but still allows for diffusion of potential differentiation mediators to unstrained myoblasts on coverslips. To determine the role of IL-6, we utilized myoblast unicultures ± IL-6 (0-100 ng/ml) and cocultures ± α-IL-6 (0-200 μg/ml). Untreated uniculture myoblasts served as a negative control. After 96 h, coverslips (n = 6-21) were microscopically analyzed and quantified by blinded observer for differentiation endpoints: myotubes per square millimeter (>3 nuclei/cell), nuclei/myotube, and fusion efficiency (%nuclei within myotubes). The presence of fibroblasts and fibroblast conditioned media significantly enhanced myotube number (P < 0.05). However, in coculture, CSDS applied to fibroblasts did not reproduce this effect. ALDS following CSDS increased myotube number by 78% and fusion efficiency by 96% vs. CSDS alone (P < 0.05). Fibroblasts in coculture increase IL-6 secretion; however, IL-6 secretion did not correlate with enhanced differentiation among strain groups. Exogenous IL-6 in myoblast uniculture failed to induce differentiation. However, α-IL-6 attenuated differentiation in all coculture groups (P < 0.05). Fibroblasts secrete soluble mediators that have profound effects on several measures of myoblast differentiation. Specific biophysical strain patterns modify these outcomes, and suggest that myofascial release after repetitive strain increases myoblast differentiation and thus may improve muscle repair in vivo. Neutralization of IL-6 in coculture significantly reduced differentiation, suggesting fibroblast-IL-6 is necessary but not sufficient in this process.  相似文献   

16.
Myogenesis is a complex sequence of events, including the irreversible transition from the proliferation-competent myoblast stage into fused, multinucleated myotubes. During embryonic development, myogenic differentiation is regulated by positive and negative signals from surrounding tissues. Stimulation due to stretch- or load-induced signaling is now beginning to be understood as a factor which affects gene sequences, protein synthesis and an increase in Ca2+ influx in myocytes. Evidence of the involvement of Ca2+ -dependent activity in myoblast fusion, cell membrane and cytoskeleton component reorganization due to the activity of the ubiquitous proteolytic enzymes, calpains, has been reported. Whether there is a link between stretch- or load-induced signaling and calpain expression and activation is not known. Using a magnetic bead stimulation assay and C2C12 mouse myoblasts cell population, we have demonstrated that mechanical stimulation via laminin receptors leads to an increase in m-calpain expression, but no increase in the expression of other calpain isoforms. Our study revealed that after a short period of stimulation, m-calpain relocates into focal adhesion complexes and is followed by a breakdown of specific focal adhesion proteins previously identified as substrates for this enzyme. We show that stimulation also leads to an increase in calpain activity in these cells. These data support the pivotal role for m-calpain in the control of muscle precursor cell differentiation and thus strengthen the idea of its implication during the initial events of muscle development.  相似文献   

17.
18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1989,109(4):1779-1786
During myogenesis myoblasts fuse to form multinucleate cells that express muscle-specific proteins. A specific cell-cell adhesion process precedes lipid bilayer union during myoblast fusion (Knudsen, K. A., and A. F. Horwitz. 1977. Dev. Biol. 58:328-338) and is mediated by cell surface glycoproteins (Knudsen, K. A., 1985. J. Cell Biol. 101:891- 897). In this paper we show that myoblast adhesion and myotube formation are inhibited by treating fusion-competent myoblasts with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC). The effect of PI-PLC on myoblast adhesion is dose dependent and inhibited by D-myo- inositol 1-monophosphate and the effect on myotube formation is reversible, suggesting a specific, nontoxic effect on myogenesis by the enzyme. A soluble form of adhesion-related glycoproteins is released from fusion-competent myoblasts by treatment with PI-PLC as evidenced by (a) the ability of phospholipase C (PLC)-released material to block the adhesion-perturbing activity of a polyclonal antiserum to intact myoblasts; and (b) the ability of PLC-released glycoprotein to stimulate adhesion-perturbing antisera when injected into mice. PI-PLC treatment of fusion-competent myoblasts releases an isoform of N-CAM into the supernate, suggesting that N-CAM may participate in mediating myoblast interaction during myogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We recently reported that when myoblasts fuse, m-calpain could be exteriorized. Indeed, at present a number of works support this hypothesis because this enzyme was localized intercellularly and more particularly associated to extracellular matrix components. Knowing that the cell surface of the fusing myoblast is supposed to undergo many changes, we addressed the question whether m-calpain could be involved in the phenomenon of fusion via fibronectin cleavage or degradation. Using different digestion experiments, we demonstrated that soluble purified fibronectin and highly insoluble fibronectin fibrils represent very good substrates for this proteinase; moreover, at the burst of fusion, fibronectin proteolytic fragments could be identified. On the other hand, we have conducted biological assays on cultured myoblasts using a defined medium supplemented by exogenous factors capable of stimulating or inhibiting m-calpain activity. The effects of such factors on rat myoblast fusion and concomitantly on the targeted glycoprotein were analyzed and quantified. When m-calpain activity and the phenomenon of fusion were reduced (defined medium without insulin), the amount of the 220-kDa fibronectin band was increased by 43%. When m-calpain activity and myoblast fusion were prevented by addition of antibodies to m-calpain or calpain inhibitor II, the fibronectin concentration was higher since it was increased by 67 and 71%, respectively. In addition, when observed at the ultrastructural level, m-calpain seems to be localized at the potential fusion site of myoblasts and more particularly associated to the extracellular matrix when muscle cells were initially treated by anti-m-calpain IgG. Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that exteriorized m-calpain could be, in part, involved in myoblast fusion via fibronectin alteration or degradation.  相似文献   

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