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The abundance and distribution of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) oligomeric forms expressed in skeletal muscle is strongly dependent upon the activity state of the cells. In this study, we examined several stages of AChE biogenesis to determine which ones were regulated by muscle activity. Inhibiting spontaneous contraction of tissue-cultured quail myotubes with tetrodotoxin (TTX) reduces AChE activity by approximately 30% of the levels found in actively contracting cells. This decrease is due primarily to the loss of 20 S asymmetric (collagen-tailed) AChE from TTX-treated cultures and is reflected in reduced pool sizes for both cell surface and intracellular AChE molecules. Using monoclonal anti-AChE antibodies to immunoprecipitate and quantify isotopically labeled enzyme molecules, we show that AChE down-regulation by TTX is not mediated through changes in the rates of synthesis or degradation of AChE polypeptide chains. Newly synthesized AChE polypeptides acquire enzymatic activity at the same rate in TTX-treated cultures as in actively contracting cells, however, a larger percentage of catalytically active dimers and tetramers are secreted from TTX-treated cultures compared with controls. These results suggest that TTX-induced down-regulation of asymmetric AChE occurs at the level of assembly of globular AChE molecules with collagen-like tail subunits in the Golgi apparatus, rather than through changes in the availability of catalytic subunits. Thus, post-translational mechanisms appear to play an important role in regulating the abundance and distribution of this important synaptic component in skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

3.
The highly organized pattern of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) molecules attached to the basal lamina of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) suggests the existence of specific binding sites for their precise localization. To test this hypothesis we immunoaffinity purified quail globular and collagen-tailed AChE forms and determined their ability to attach to frog NMJs which had been pretreated with high-salt detergent buffers. The NMJs were visualized by labeling acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) with TRITC-α-bungarotoxin and AChE by indirect immunofluorescence; there was excellent correspondence (>97%) between the distribution of frog AChRs and AChE. Binding of the exogenous quail AChE was determined using a speciesspecific monoclonal antibody. When frog neuromuscular junctions were incubated with the globular G4/G2 quail AChE forms, there was no detectable binding above background levels, whereas when similar preparations were incubated with the collagen-tailed A12 AChE form >80% of the frog synaptic sites were also immunolabeled for quail AChE attached. Binding of the A12 quail AChE was blocked by heparin, yet could not be removed with high salt buffer containing detergent once attached. Similar results were obtained using empty myofiber basal lamina sheaths produced by mechanical or freeze-thaw damage. These experiments show that specific binding sites exist for collagen-tailed AChE molecules on the synaptic basal lamina of the vertebrate NMJ and suggest that these binding sites comprise a “molecular parking lot” in which the AChE molecules can be released, retained, and turned over.  相似文献   

4.
With the aim of investigating the roles of motor innervation and activity on muscle characteristics, we studied the molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) in fast-twitch (semimembranosus accessorius; SMa) and slow-twitch (semimembranosus proprius; SMp) muscles of the rabbit. We have shown that SMa and SMp express different patterns and tissue distribution of AChE forms and that the effect of long denervation varies with age. Three principal findings concerning expression of AChE molecular forms emerge from these studies. (1) The activity of AChE and the pattern of its molecular forms are particularly altered in adult denervated SMa and SMp muscles. AChE activity increases by 10-fold in both muscles, but asymmetric forms disappear in SMa and increase by 20-fold in SMp muscles. A similar alteration of AChE is found after tenotomy of these muscles, showing that the effect of denervation may be partly due to suppression of muscle activity. (2) The different changes occurring in the composition of AChE molecular forms in adult denervated SMa and SMp muscles are consistent with fluorescent staining with anti-AChE monoclonal antibodies and with DBA or VVA lectins, which bind to AChE asymmetric, collagen-tailed forms. These lectins poorly stain denervated SMa muscle surfaces but intensely stain neuromuscular junctions and extrasynaptic areas in denervated SMp muscle. (3) In contrast with the adult, denervation of 1-day-old muscles does not markedly modify the total amount of AChE or the proportions of its molecular forms, despite dramatic effects on muscle structure. These results are supported by studies of labeling with fluorescent DBA: the lectin only slightly stains the muscle fiber surface of denervated 15-day-old SMp muscle. Taken together, these data show that denervated muscles escape physiological regulation, producing increased levels of AChE with highly variable cellular distribution and patterns of molecular forms, depending on the age of operation and on the type of muscle.  相似文献   

5.
The collagen-tailed form of acetylcholinesterase (ColQ-AChE) is the major if not unique form of the enzyme associated with the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). This enzyme form consists of catalytic and non-catalytic subunits encoded by separate genes, assembled as three enzymatic tetramers attached to the three-stranded collagen-like tail (ColQ). This synaptic form of the enzyme is tightly attached to the basal lamina associated with the glycosaminoglycan perlecan. Fasciculin-2 is a snake toxin that binds tightly to AChE. Localization of junctional AChE on frozen sections of muscle with fluorescent Fasciculin-2 shows that the labeled toxin dissociates with a half-life of about 36h. The fluorescent toxin can subsequently be taken up by the muscle fibers by endocytosis giving the appearance of enzyme recycling. Newly synthesized AChE molecules undergo a lengthy series of processing events before final transport to the cell surface and association with the synaptic basal lamina. Following co-translational glycosylation the catalytic subunit polypeptide chain interacts with several molecular chaperones, glycosidases and glycosyltransferases to produce a catalytically active enzyme that can subsequently bind to one of two non-catalytic subunits. These molecular chaperones can be rate limiting steps in the assembly process. Treatment of muscle cells with a synthetic peptide containing the PRAD attachment sequence and a KDEL retention signal results in a large increase in assembled and exportable AChE, providing an additional level of post-translational control. Finally, we have found that Pumilio2, a member of the PUF family of RNA-binding proteins, is highly concentrated at the vertebrate neuromuscular junction where it plays an important role in regulating AChE translation through binding to a highly conserved NANOS response element in the 3'-UTR. Together, these studies define several new levels of AChE regulation in electrically excitable cells.  相似文献   

6.
Myotubes prepared from the Japanese quail embryo at 9 days gestation were cultivated in the presence of glycyl-L-glutamine (Gly-Gln, beta-endorphin C-terminal dipeptide) or glycyl-glutamic acid (Gly-Glu), and changes in the activity of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) molecular forms and binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha BGT) to cell surface nicotinic acetylcholine receptors were measured. The A12 oligomer was the major form of AChE in the cultures. The activity of all molecular forms of the enzyme was increased in the presence of Gly-Gln, but Gly-Glu did not alter AChE activity. In cells infected with the temperature-sensitive mutant, La31C, of Rous sarcoma virus (ts-RSV) and transferred to the nonpermissive temperature, the A12 form of AChE was absent, but its activity could be induced following exposure of the cells to Gly-Gln. When cells treated in this way were incubated in the presence of collagenase, there was a small but significant loss of A12 AChE activity, indicating that Gly-Gln stimulated the activity of a pool of this oligomer which was mainly but not entirely intracellular. Neither Gly-Gln nor Gly-Glu influenced 125I-alpha BGT binding after exposure of the cells to the peptides for any duration. Neither Gly-Gln nor Gly-Glu influenced the accumulation of cyclic AMP in the cultures. beta-Endorphin is one of a family of peptides that coexist transiently with acetylcholine in lower motoneurones of vertebrates in the perinatal period. This report provides evidence for the selective trophic activity of one of its derivatives toward the postsynaptic cholinergic system in avian muscle cells.  相似文献   

7.
When grown in primary cell culture in the absence of neurons, muscle cells from a variety of species synthesize several forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), including the collagen-tailed A12 form. A12 AChE has been the subject of much study because it is thought to be a major functional enzyme form normally found in the basal lamina at the neuromuscular junction. In this paper, we show that muscle fibers derived from mouse embryos and neonates are also able to synthesize substantial percentages of their AChE as the A12 form when grown in vitro. This synthesis is modulated by a process associated with spontaneous muscle contractile activity since both total enzyme levels and the proportion of A12 AChE expressed on the cell surface are decreased when the cells are grown in the sodium channel blocker tetrodotoxin, which blocks muscle contraction. On the other hand, when the cells are treated with veratridine, which opens sodium channels, thereby mimicking one aspect of muscle contraction, their AChE levels are comparable to those of untreated cells. Although smaller in magnitude, these changes are similar to those seen in rat muscle cultures. A novel feature of mouse muscle cultures, not seen in those from rat and chick, is the presence of a secreted enzyme form that sediments in the same position as the cellular A12 form (when separated on sucrose density gradients containing high salt) and is also collagenase sensitive.  相似文献   

8.
The A12 (asymmetric) form of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is generally considered to be synthesized in leg muscle tissues by myotubes under neural influence, but not by myoblasts. We have examined the expression of the different molecular forms of AChE in explants of developing limb buds and dermomyotomes (the myogenic part of the somites) obtained from 3-day-old chick and quail embryos, either directly after removal or during in vitro culture. We describe a muscular differentiation of both territories in vitro, leading to the formation of myotubes which are morphologically similar to the class of early muscle cells described by Bonner and Hauschka (1974). In vivo the A12 form is present in quail dermomyotomes which are almost entirely composed of mononucleated poorly differentiated cells; in contrast, it is absent from similar cells in chick dermomyotomes and from limb buds in both species. This shows that in the case of quail embryos the appearance of the A12 form precedes the fusion of myoblasts into myotubes. In both species, dermomyotome explants express asymmetric and globular forms of the enzyme during muscular differentiation in vitro, whereas limb buds synthesize only globular forms. After surgical removal of neural tube and/or neural crest at 2 days in ovo, the biosynthesis of the A forms in quail dermomyotomes is not suppressed and is consequently not dependent upon prior connection of the dermomyotomes to central neurons or upon the presence of autonomic precursors. Since limb bud muscle cells derive from somites our results raise questions concerning the differentiation of migrating somitic cells in this territory where a neural influence appears necessary to induce the biosynthesis of asymmetric AChE forms.  相似文献   

9.
The secretion and cellular localization of the molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) were studied in primary cultures of rat sympathetic neurons. When cultured under conditions favoring a noradrenergic phenotype, these neurons synthesized and secreted large quantities of the tetrameric G4, and the dodecameric A12 forms, and minor amounts of the G1 and G2 forms. When these neurons adopted the cholinergic phenotype, i.e., in the presence of muscle-conditioned medium, the development of the cellular A12 form was completely inhibited. These neurons secreted only globular, mainly G4, AChE. Both cellular and secreted A12 AChE in adrenergic cultures aggregated at an ionic strength similar to that of the culture medium, raising the hypothesis that this form was associated with a polyanionic component of basal lamina. In noradrenergic neurons, 60-80% of the catalytic sites were exposed at the cell surface. In particular, 80% of G4 form, but only 60% of the A12 form, was external, demonstrating for the A12 form a sizeable intracellular pool. The hydrophobic character of the molecular forms was studied in relation to their cellular localization. As in muscle cells, most of the G4 form was membrane-bound. Whereas 76% of the cell surface A12 form was solubilized in the aqueous phase by high salt concentrations, only 50% of the intracellular A12 form was solubilized under these conditions. The rest of intracellular A12 could be solubilized by detergents and was thus either membrane-bound or entrapped in vesicles originating from, e.g., the Golgi apparatus.  相似文献   

10.
Multinucleated skeletal muscle fibers are compartmentalized with respect to the expression and organization of several intracellular and cell surface proteins including acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Mosaic muscle fibers formed from homozygous myoblasts expressing two allelic variants of AChE preferentially translate and assemble the polypeptides in the vicinity of the nucleus encoding the mRNA (Rotundo, R. L. 1990. J. Cell Biol. 110:715-719). To determine whether the locally synthesized AChE molecules are targeted to specific regions of the myotube surface, primary quail myoblasts were mixed with mononucleated cells of the mouse muscle C2/C12 cell line and allowed to fuse, forming heterospecific mosaic myotubes. Cell surface enzyme was localized by immunofluorescence using an avian AChE-specific monoclonal antibody. HOECHST 33342 was used to distinguish between quail and mouse nuclei in myotubes. Over 80% of the quail nuclei exhibited clusters of cell surface AChE in mosaic quail-mouse myotubes, whereas only 4% of the mouse nuclei had adjacent quail AChE-positive regions of membrane, all of which were located next to a quail nucleus. In contrast, membrane proteins such as Na+/K+ ATPase, which are not restricted to specific regions of the myotube surface, are free to diffuse over the entire length of the fiber. These studies indicate that the AChE molecules expressed in multinucleated muscle fibers are preferentially transported and localized to regions of surface membrane overlying the nucleus of origin. This targeting could play an important role in establishing and maintaining specialized cell surface domains such as the neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions.  相似文献   

11.
Skeletal muscles of different vertebrate species contain, as it is the case in other cholinergic tissues, two classes of collagen-tailed, asymmetric forms (A-forms) of acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Class I A-forms are readily brought into solution in the presence of high salt, while class II A-forms do additionally require a chelating agent, such as EDTA, for solubilization. All A-forms aggregate at low ionic strength but only class II A-forms are reaggregated by excess Ca++, even in the presence of 1M NaCl. This Ca++-mediated aggregability of class II A-forms is slowly lost upon exposure to detergents such as Triton X-100.Although these two classes of AChE tailed forms seem to be present in endplate and non-endplate areas, and in both the extra- and intracellular compartments, class II A-forms are predominantly extracellular and endplate-specific, at least in the rat diaphragm. On the other hand, well-characterized fast- and slow-twitch muscles show no preference for either class of asymmetric AChE species. Upon denervation, class I A-forms are degraded faster and disappear earlier than their class II counterparts, which are still easily detectable 17 days after nerve section.Class I and class II AChE molecular species exist in similar relative proportions in many vertebrate muscles. Thus, collagen-tailed forms may be altogether more abundant, in skeletal muscle, than it was hitherto realized.It is expected that this further example of AChE polymorphism will contribute to a better understanding of cholinergic transmission in skeletal muscle and, more specially, of nerve-muscle interactions.  相似文献   

12.
The vast majority of newly synthesized acetylcholinesterase (AChE) molecules do not assemble into catalytically active oligomeric forms and are rapidly degraded intracellularly by the endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation pathway. We have previously shown that AChE in skeletal muscle is regulated in part post-translationally by the availability of the noncatalytic subunit collagen Q, and others have shown that expression of a 17-amino acid N-terminal proline-rich attachment domain of collagen Q is sufficient to promote AChE tetramerization in cells producing AChE. In this study we show that muscle cells, or cell lines expressing AChE catalytic subunits, incubated with synthetic proline-rich attachment domain peptides containing the endoplasmic reticulum retrieval sequence KDEL take up and retrogradely transport them to the endoplasmic reticulum network where they induce assembly of AChE tetramers. The peptides act to enhance AChE folding thereby rescuing them from reticulum degradation. This enhanced folding efficiency occurs in the presence of inhibitors of protein synthesis and in turn increases total cell-associated AChE activity and active tetramer secretion. Pulse-chase studies of isotopically labeled AChE molecules show that the enzyme is rescued from intracellular degradation. These studies provide a mechanistic explanation for the large scale intracellular degradation of AChE previously observed and indicate that simple peptides alone can increase the production and secretion of this critical synaptic enzyme in muscle tissue.  相似文献   

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A component of collagen-tailed acetylcholinesterase (asymmetric; A-AChE) in muscle forms a metabolically-stable pool which can be released from the cell surface only by collagenase, suggesting that part of the enzyme is covalently bound by its tail (COL.Q) subunits. We have investigated whether this insoluble pool forms through covalent cross-linking of A-AChE to extracellular matrix glycoproteins by tissue transglutaminase (Tg; type 2 transglutaminase). Tg catalyzed the incorporation of the polyamine substrate3[H]-putrescine into the collagen tail of affinity-purified avian A12-AChE. Complexes between A12-AChE and cellular fibronectin were also formed in vitro by Tg. In quail myotubes, retinoic acid, which stimulates the formation of (-glutamyl)lysine isodipeptide bonds by Tg in myotubes, increased the proportion of extraction-resistant (er) A-AChE. Following irreversible inactivation of AChE by diisopropylfluorophosphate, entry of newly-synthesized A-AChE into the extraction-resistant pool was inhibited by a competitive Tg inactivator RS48373-007. The quantity of exogenously-added A12 AChE incorporated into the extraction-resistant pool in living myotubes was increased by Tg in the presence of calcium. The inhibition of cross-bridge formation in fibrillar collagen by -aminopropionitrile, and pre-exposure of myotubes to a monoclonal antibody to fibronectin, resulted in a reduction in the size of the erA-AChE pool present on the cell-surface. The evidence supports the hypothesis that a component of insoluble collagen-tailed AChE, once subject to clustering influences mediated via reversible docking to proteoglycans and their receptors, is anchored at the cell surface through covalent cross-linking by Tg. The high stability of the (-glutamyl)lysine isopeptide bond is likely to contribute to the observed low turnover of the erA-AChE fraction.  相似文献   

15.
The present paper examines where the extracellular-matrix (ECM) 16S acetylcholinesterase (AChE, EC 3.1.1.7) is assembled in muscle cells in culture. The existence of an internal pool of 16S AChE was detected by using AChE inhibitors of differing membrane permeability. After irreversible inhibition of all cellular esterase, the newly synthesized 16S form appears in an intracellular compartment and is only later detected on the cell surface. Results show that the ECM 16S AChE is assembled within muscle cells.  相似文献   

16.
Primary cultures of avian muscle cells express both globular and asymmetric molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) when grown in a simple defined culture medium. Under these conditions, we analyzed the role of various agents interfering with muscular activity: tetrodotoxin (TTX) and veratridine, as well as a depolarizing concentration of KCl. These treatments caused the complete cessation of contractions in mature myotubes. We observed no influence on cellular AChE activity. The paralyzing treatments induced different effects on AChE secretion: TTX increased the secretion by approximately 25%, whereas KCl and veratridine reduced it by approximately 30%. The proportions of secreted molecular forms (mostly hydrophilic G4 and G2) were not modified significantly. TTX did not affect the pattern of molecular forms of cellular AChE (in particular, the proportion of A forms was not changed). Depolarization by veratridine or KCl induced an increase in the proportion of A forms in mature myotubes by a factor of 2-3. Similar results were obtained with quail myotubes cultured under the same conditions. This study shows that, in avian muscle cultures, the ionic balance across myotube membranes, rather than muscular activity per se, can regulate the level of A forms and the rate of AChE secretion. These results do not exclude the possible involvement of other factors, such as Ca2+ and/or peptidic factors. In addition, taking together our results and data from the literature. we conclude that the expression of AChE molecular forms depends both on the species and on the culture conditions used.  相似文献   

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The aim of this study was to characterize the molecular forms of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) associated with the synaptic basal lamina at the neuromuscular junction. The observations were made on the neuromuscular junctions of cutaneous pectoris muscles of frog, Rana pipiens, which are similar to junctions of most other vertebrates including mammals, but are especially convenient for experimentation. By measuring relative AChE activity in junctional and extrajunctional regions of muscles after selective inactivation of extracellular AChE with echothiophate, or of intracellular AChE with DFP and 2-PAM, we found that > 66% of the total AChE activity in the muscle was junction- specific, and that > 50% of the junction-specific AChE was on the cell surface. More than 80% of the cell surface AChE was solubilized in high ionic strength detergent-free buffer, indicating that most, if not all, was a component of the synaptic basal lamina. Sedimentation analysis of that fraction indicated that while asymmetric forms (A12, A8) were abundant, globular forms sedimenting at 4-6 S (G1 and G2), composed > 50% of the AChE. It was also found that when muscles were damaged in various ways that caused degeneration of axons and muscle fibers but left intact the basal lamina sheaths, the small globular forms persisted at the synaptic site for weeks after phagocytosis of cellular components; under certain damage conditions, the proportion of globular to asymmetric forms in the vacated basal lamina sheaths was as in normal junctions. While the asymmetric forms required high ionic strength for solubilization, the extracellular globular AChE could be extracted from the junctional regions of normal and damaged muscles by isotonic buffer. Some of the globular AChE appeared to be amphiphilic when examined in detergents, suggesting that it may form hydrophobic interactions, but most was non-amphiphilic consistent with the possibility that it forms weak electrostatic interactions. We conclude that the major form of AChE in frog synaptic basal lamina is globular and that its mode of association with the basal lamina differs from that of the asymmetric forms.  相似文献   

19.
The expression of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) is markedly increased during myogenic differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts to myotubes; the expression is mediated by intrinsic factor(s) during muscle differentiation. In order to analyze the molecular mechanisms regulating AChE expression during myogenic differentiation, a approximately 2.2-kb human AChE promoter tagged with a luciferase reporter gene, namely pAChE-Luc, was stably transfected into C2C12 cells. The profile of promoter-driven luciferase activity during myogenic differentiation of C2C12 myotubes was found to be similar to that of endogenous expression of AChE catalytic subunit. The increase of AChE expression was reciprocally regulated by a cAMP-dependent signaling pathway. The level of intracellular cAMP, the activity of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, the phosphorylation of cAMP-responsive element binding protein and the activity of cAMP- responsive element (CRE) were down-regulated during the myotube formation. Mutating the CRE site of human AChE promoter altered the original myogenic profile of the promoter activity and its suppressive response to cAMP. In addition, the suppressive effect of the CRE site is dependent on its location on the promoter. Therefore, our results suggest that a cAMP-dependent signaling pathway serves as a suppressive element in regulating the expression of AChE during early myogenesis.  相似文献   

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