首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Desmin is an intermediate filament protein in skeletal muscle that forms a meshlike network around Z-disks. A model of a muscle fiber was developed to investigate the mechanical role of desmin. A two-dimensional mesh of viscoelastic sarcomere elements was connected laterally by elastic elements representing desmin. The equations of motion for each sarcomere boundary were evaluated at quasiequilibrium to determine sarcomere stresses and strains. Simulations of passive stretch and fixed-end contractions yielded values for sarcomere misalignment and stress in wild-type and desmin null fibers. Passive sarcomere misalignment increased nonlinearly with fiber strain in both wild-type and desmin null simulations and was significantly larger without desmin. During fixed-end contraction, desmin null simulations also demonstrated greater sarcomere misalignment and reduced stress production compared with wild-type. In simulations with only a fraction of wild-type desmin present, fixed-end stress increased as a function of desmin concentration and this relationship was influenced by the cellular location of the desmin filaments. This model suggests that desmin stabilizes Z-disks and enables greater stress production by providing a mechanical tether between adjacent myofibrils and to the extracellular matrix and that the significance of the tether is a function of its location within the cell.  相似文献   

2.
Assembly of amino-terminally deleted desmin in vimentin-free cells   总被引:13,自引:9,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(5):1971-1985
To study the role of the amino-terminal domain of the desmin subunit in intermediate filament (IF) formation, several deletions in the sequence encoding this domain were made. The deleted hamster desmin genes were fused to the RSV promoter. Expression of such constructs in vimentin- free MCF-7 cells as well as in vimentin-containing HeLa cells, resulted in the synthesis of mutant proteins of the expected size. Single- and double-label immunofluorescence assays of transfected cells showed that in the absence of vimentin, desmin subunits missing amino acids 4-13 are still capable of filament formation, although in addition to filaments large numbers of desmin dots are present. Mutant desmin subunits missing larger portions of their amino terminus cannot form filaments on their own. It may be concluded that the amino-terminal region comprising amino acids 7-17 contains residues indispensable for desmin filament formation in vivo. Furthermore it was shown that the endogenous vimentin IF network in HeLa cells masks the effects of mutant desmin on IF assembly. Intact and mutant desmin colocalized completely with endogenous vimentin in HeLa cells. Surprisingly, in these cells endogenous keratin also seemed to colocalize with endogenous vimentin, even if the endogenous vimentin filaments were disturbed after expression of some of the mutant desmin proteins. In MCF-7 cells some overlap between endogenous keratin and intact exogenous desmin filaments was also observed, but mutant desmin proteins did not affect the keratin IF structures. In the absence of vimentin networks (MCF-7 cells), the initiation of desmin filament formation seems to start on the preexisting keratin filaments. However, in the presence of vimentin (HeLa cells) a gradual integration of desmin in the preexisting vimentin filaments apparently takes place.  相似文献   

3.
The assembly of intermediate filaments into a cytoplasmic network was studied by microinjecting into the nuclei and cytoplasms of PtK2 cells, plasmids that contained a full length desmin cDNA and an RSV promoter. Immunofluorescence was used to monitor the expression of desmin and its integration into the cells' vimentin intermediate filament network. We found that the expressed desmin co-localized with filaments of vimentin just as it does with fluorescently labelled desmin is microinjected into the cytoplasm of PtK2 cells. As early as two hours after microinjection of the plasmids, small discrete dots and short fragments of desmin could be detected throughout the cytoplasm of the cells. This initial distribution of desmin was superimposed on the filamentous pattern of vimentin in the cells. At 8 hours after microinjection of the plasmids, some of the desmin was present in long filaments that were coincident with vimentin filaments. By 18 hours, most of the desmin was in a filamentous network co-localizing with vimentin. There was no indication that desmin assembly began in the perinuclear region and proceeded toward the cell periphery. In some cells, excessively high levels of desmin were expressed. In these cases, overexpression led to clumping of desmin filaments as well as to an accumulation of diffusely distributed desmin protein in the center of the cells. This effect was apparent at approximately 18 hours after introduction of the plasmid. The native vimentin filaments in such cells were also aggregated around the nucleus, co-localizing with desmin. The microtubule networks in all injected cells appeared normal; microtubules were extended in typical arrays out to the periphery of the cells.  相似文献   

4.
Mutations in the DES gene coding for the intermediate filament protein desmin may cause skeletal and cardiac myopathies, which are frequently characterized by cytoplasmic aggregates of desmin and associated proteins at the cellular level. By atomic force microscopy, we demonstrated filament formation defects of desmin mutants, associated with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. To understand the pathogenesis of this disease, it is essential to analyze desmin filament structures under conditions in which both healthy and mutant desmin are expressed at equimolar levels mimicking an in vivo situation. Here, we applied dual color photoactivation localization microscopy using photoactivatable fluorescent proteins genetically fused to desmin and characterized the heterozygous status in living cells lacking endogenous desmin. In addition, we applied fluorescence resonance energy transfer to unravel short distance structural patterns of desmin mutants in filaments. For the first time, we present consistent high resolution data on the structural effects of five heterozygous desmin mutations on filament formation in vitro and in living cells. Our results may contribute to the molecular understanding of the pathological filament formation defects of heterozygous DES mutations in cardiomyopathies.  相似文献   

5.
Previous studies have shown that desmin, the muscle-specific intermediate filament protein, is a substrate for the endogenous muscle arginine-specific mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase and that ADP-ribosylation inhibits assembly of desmin into intermediate filaments (Huang et al., Exp. Cell Res. 226, 147-153, 1996). In this paper, the effects of mono-ADP-ribosylation on assembly and disassembly of desmin intermediate filaments were further characterized. First, it was found that ADP-ribosylated desmin does not coassemble with unmodified desmin and has no effect on assembly of unmodified desmin. Second, incubation of assembled desmin filaments with mono-ADP-ribosyltransferase and NAD+ results in disassembly of the filaments. Finally, the structural components of the attached ADP-ribose moiety responsible for altering the assembly of desmin into filaments were investigated by a stepwise cleavage of ADP-ribose with snake venom phosphodiesterase and alkaline phophatase, followed by analysis of assembly. The reactions catalyzed by these two enzymes were established using a desmin peptide as a substrate. Our results show that ribosylated desmin, but not phosphoribosylated desmin, was able to self-assemble into intermediate filaments, suggesting that the presence of a phosphate group is needed to alter desmin's assembly ability.  相似文献   

6.
Absence of desmin in skeletal muscle was found to induce an increase in passive stiffness. The present study aimed at developing rheological models of passive muscle to explain this stiffening. Models were elaborated by using experimental data depicting muscle viscoelastic behaviour. The experimental protocol included stepwise extension tests applied on control and desmin knockout soleus muscles from mice. Linear and non-linear models were composed of elastic and viscous elements. They were constructed with the aim at taking the presence or absence of desmin into account by simulating desmin as an elastic element. Furthermore, associated adaptation of connective tissues in absence of desmin was modelled as an additional elastic element. Differences in passive behaviour induced by absence of desmin were predicted by using a linear model and a non-linear one. The non-linear model was selected because: (1) it is able to predict experimental viscoelastic kinetics accounting for the increase in passive stiffness in muscles lacking desmin, (2) its design is consistent with morphological data, and (3) stiffness characteristics of its elements are in accordance with the literature. Finally, this modelling approach demonstrates that both absence of desmin and adaptation of connective tissue are required to explain the increase in passive stiffness in desmin knockout muscles.  相似文献   

7.
Association of spectrin with desmin intermediate filaments   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The association of erythrocyte spectrin with desmin filaments was investigated using two in vitro assays. The ability of spectrin to promote the interaction of desmin filaments with membranes was investigated by electron microscopy of desmin filament-erythrocyte inside-out vesicle preparations. Desmin filaments bound to erythrocyte inside-out vesicles in a spectrin-dependent manner, demonstrating that spectrin is capable of mediating the association of desmin filaments with plasma membranes. A quantitative sedimentation assay was used to demonstrate the direct association of spectrin with desmin filaments in vitro. When increasing concentrations of spectrin were incubated with desmin filaments, spectrin cosedimented with desmin filaments in a concentration-dependent manner. At near saturation the spectrin:desmin molar ratio in the sedimented complex was 1:230. Our results suggest that, in addition to its well characterized associations with actin, spectrin functions to mediate the association of intermediate filaments with plasma membranes. It might be that nonerythrocyte spectrins share erythrocyte spectrin's ability to bind to intermediate filaments and function in nonerythroid cells to promote the interaction of intermediate filaments with actin filaments and/or the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

8.
The muscle-specific intermediate filament protein, desmin, is one of the earliest myogenic markers whose functional role during myogenic commitment and differentiation is unknown. Sequence comparison of the presently isolated and fully characterized mouse desmin cDNA clones revealed a single domain of polypeptide similarity between desmin and the basic and helix-loop-helix region of members of the myoD family myogenic regulators. This further substantiated the need to search for the function of desmin. Constructs designed to express anti-sense desmin RNA were used to obtain stably transfected C2C12 myoblast cell lines. Several lines were obtained where expression of the anti-sense desmin RNA inhibited the expression of desmin RNA and protein down to basal levels. As a consequence, the differentiation of these myoblasts was blocked; complete inhibition of myoblast fusion and myotube formation was observed. Rescue of the normal phenotype was achieved either by spontaneous revertants, or by overexpression of the desmin sense RNA in the defective cell lines. In several of the cell lines obtained, inhibition of desmin expression was followed by differential inhibition of the myogenic regulators myoD and/or myogenin, depending on the stage and extent of desmin inhibition in these cells. These data suggested that myogenesis is modulated by at least more than one pathway and desmin, which so far was believed to be merely an architectural protein, seems to play a key role in this process.  相似文献   

9.
The colocalization of desmin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in astrocytes was inferred from previous studies demonstrating a unique antigenic composition comprising GFAP, desmin and vimentin in perisinusoidal stellate cells (PSC) of liver which share several features with astrocytes. In the present study the colocalization of GFAP and desmin was investigated by double-immunolabeling experiments in 12-day-old rat astroglial primary cultures with antiserum against GFAP and two commercial monoclonal antibodies against desmin, antibodies of clone DEU-10 and clone DEB-5. These antibodies selectively decorated the perisinusoidal stellate cells (PSC) of liver for which desmin is known to be a marker. The results obtained with astroglial cells demonstrate that both GFAP and desmin are coexpressed in morphologically different types, process-bearing and process-lacking astrocytes. The expression of desmin was apparently more pronounced in process-lacking astrocytes and was considerably lower in process-bearing ones. In process-lacking astrocytes, in contrast to filamentous cytoplasmic staining for GFAP, the immunoreactivity for desmin was non-filamentous and was irregularly spread in the perinuclear cytoplasm of the cells, while in process-bearing astrocytes the pattern of staining for desmin was similar to that of GFAP. The variability in the intensity and pattern of staining for desmin in astrocytes might be due to transitional stages of differentiation for part of the cells. This interpretation was supported by the presence of GFAP in the cells weakly expressing smooth muscle alpha-actin and the absence of GFAP in the cells enriched with microfilaments.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Desmin, the muscle-specific intermediate filament, is involved in myofibrillar myopathies, dilated cardiomyopathy and muscle wasting. Desmin is the target of posttranslational modifications (PTMs) such as phosphorylation, ADP-ribosylation and ubiquitylation as well as nonenzymatic modifications such as glycation, oxidation and nitration. Several PTM target residues and their corresponding modifying enzymes have been discovered in human and nonhuman desmin. The major effect of phosphorylation and ADP-ribosylation is the disassembly of desmin filaments, while ubiquitylation of desmin leads to its degradation. The regulation of the desmin filament network by phosphorylation and ADP-ribosylation was found to be implicated in several major biological processes such as myogenesis, myoblast fusion, muscle contraction, muscle atrophy, cell division and possibly desmin interactions with its binding partners. Phosphorylation of desmin is also implicated in many forms of desmin-related myopathies (desminopathies). In this review, we summarize the findings on desmin PTMs and their implication in biological processes and pathologies, and discuss the current knowledge on the regulation of the desmin network by PTMs. We conclude that the desmin filament network can be seen as an intricate scaffold for muscle cell structure and biological processes and that its dynamics can be affected by PTMs. There are now precise tools to investigate PTMs and visualize cellular structures that have been underexploited in the study of desminopathies. Future studies should focus on these aspects.  相似文献   

12.
The association of desmin, a 55,000-dalton intermediate-filament protein, with the developing cardiac myofibril was studied by immunocytochemical methods in primary cultured myocytes isolated from embyronic rat hearts at different ages. In the earliest contractile myocytes obtained from 10-day-old embryonic hearts, desmin exists as an extensive cytoskeletal network with little or no association with the myofibrils. As the heart develops the cytoskeletal desmin undergoes the myofibrils. Initially, the cytoskeletal desmin appears to outline the developing myofibril as short, discontinuous filaments. At intermediate stages of heart development, desmin filaments in 12- to 16-day-old embryonic myocytes continue to outline the forming myofibrils. Associated with these filaments are crossbridges and foci of desmin spaced at a frequency equal to that of the Z-line spacing. Desmin becomes progressively associated with the myofibril from the central region of the cell toward the cell margin. Desmin filaments at this stage begin to coalesce in the region of the intercalated disk. In the early neonatal heart, desmin of the Z lines becomes continuous across the sarcomere and appears to integrate the myofibrils into a unit. These observations suggest that desmin is not required in the early stages of mammalian heart development for the initial assembly of cardiac sarcomeres or the initiation of cardiac myofibrillar contractions. In later stages of mammalian heart development, desmin is found associated with the cardiac myofibrils in such a manner as to stably integrate these elements into the cytoplasm. Additionally, desmin, in the Z lines of the more mature myocytes appears to maintain the myofibrils in close registry to each other and to the intercalated disk.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Isolated myocytes of the adult mammalian heart are useful for studying cytoskeletal changes during development of irreversible myocardial injuries. Using monoclonal antibodies we have studied the structural organization of desmin in freshly isolated cardiomyocytes from rat hearts. This preparation consists of approximately 85% calcium tolerant rod shaped cells and 15% contracted "square cells" and "round cells" that were initially injured during separation. Cells were quick-frozen at -196 degrees C without any chemical stabilization, cryosectioned and then further processed for immunofluorescence or immunoelectron microscopy. Freshly isolated rod shaped cells exhibit the specific pattern of interfibrillar desmin organization of striated muscle. Furthermore, high resolution immunogold preparations show that desmin in the rod cells occurs in apposition to the edges of the Z-bands as well as closely associated with the plasmalemma. We could find no evidence for the presence of desmin within the Z-band plaques. This organization of desmin is completely absent in the contracted round cells. Thus, already at advanced stages of square cell development, desmin is almost entirely confined to the outer areas of the central filamentous core. We conclude that during the process of square cell contracture, the filamentous desmin contacts with Z-bands and sarcolemma are broken, leading to the unorganized array of desmin in round cells.  相似文献   

16.
Using immunoelectron microscopy it is demonstrated that desmin subunits missing their complete carboxy-terminal domain are incapable of homopolymeric filament formation in vivo. Furthermore it is shown that, in vimentin-containing cells, desmin integrates into preexisting vimentin filaments resulting in desmin/vimentin heteropolymers. Removal of the amino-terminal or both nonhelical end domains of desmin increases Triton X-100 solubility of the mutant desmin subunits. Expression of desmin mutants containing deletions in the C-terminal part of the rod in vimentin-free cells results in an increase of the Triton X-100 solubility too. In contrast, if expressed in vimentin-containing cells, these mutant subunits remain in the Triton X-100 insoluble fraction. Deletion of the nonhelical carboxy-terminal domain only has no effect on solubility. In vimentin-free cells, stably expressed desmin subunits missing their amino-terminal domains display a slightly higher turnover rate compared to wild-type desmin. Transiently expressed desmin subunits missing 18 or more carboxy-terminal residues of the rod domain are rapidly degraded in vimentin-free cells. In vimentin-containing cells, turnover rates were much less pronounced. Finally, by using site-directed mutagenesis, we were able to map specific residues important for de novo filament assembly within the amino-terminal domain and in the conserved part at the C-terminus of the alpha-helical domain.  相似文献   

17.
Thrombic digestion of chicken gizzard desmin resulted in the cleavage of six arginyl bonds in the desmin molecule (at arginine residues 27, 33, 48, 59, 67 and 96), all of which are located in the N-terminal globular domain of the molecule. The large thrombic fragment (residues 97–463) of desmin isolated from this digest, which contains the central rod and C-terminal non-helical regions of desmin, was found to form filamentous structures indistinguishable from those of intact desmin. These results indicate that, in contrast to previous predictions, the N-terminal domain of desmin is not essential for intermediate filament formation.  相似文献   

18.
In most myogenic systems, synthesis of the intermediate filament (IF) protein vimentin precedes the synthesis of the muscle-specific IF protein desmin. In the dorsal myotome of the Xenopus embryo, however, there is no preexisting vimentin filament system and desmin's initial organization is quite different from that seen in vimentin-containing myocytes (Cary and Klymkowsky, 1994. Differentiation. In press.). To determine whether the organization of IFs in the Xenopus myotome reflects features unique to Xenopus or is due to specific properties of desmin, we used the injection of plasmid DNA to drive the synthesis of vimentin or desmin in myotomal cells. At low levels of accumulation, exogenous vimentin and desmin both enter into the endogenous desmin system of the myotomal cell. At higher levels exogenous vimentin forms longitudinal IF systems similar to those seen in vimentin-expressing myogenic systems and massive IF bundles. Exogenous desmin, on the other hand, formed a reticular IF meshwork and non-filamentous aggregates. In embryonic epithelial cells, both vimentin and desmin formed extended IF networks. Vimentin and desmin differ most dramatically in their NH2- terminal "head" regions. To determine whether the head region was responsible for the differences in the behavior of these two proteins, we constructed plasmids encoding chimeric proteins in which the head of one was attached to the body of the other. In muscle, the vimentin head- desmin body (VDD) polypeptide formed longitudinal IFs and massive IF bundles like vimentin. The desmin head-vimentin body (DVV) polypeptide, on the other hand, formed IF meshworks and non-filamentous structures like desmin. In embryonic epithelial cells DVV formed a discrete filament network while VDD did not. Based on the behavior of these chimeric proteins, we conclude that the head domains of vimentin and desmin are structurally distinct and not interchangeable, and that the head domain of desmin is largely responsible for desmin's muscle- specific behaviors.  相似文献   

19.
Heterozygous mutations of the human desmin gene on chromosome 2q35 cause hereditary and sporadic myopathies and cardiomyopathies. The expression of mutant desmin brings about partial disruption of the extra sarcomeric desmin cytoskeleton and abnormal protein aggregation in the sarcoplasm of striated muscle cells. The precise molecular pathways and sequential steps that lead from a desmin gene defect to progressive muscle damage are still unclear. We tested whether mutant desmin changes the biomechanical properties and the intrinsic mechanical stress response of primary cultured myoblasts derived from a patient carrying a heterozygous R350P desmin mutation. Compared to wildtype controls, undifferentiated mutant desmin myoblasts revealed increased cell death and substrate detachment in response to cyclic stretch on flexible membranes. Moreover, magnetic tweezer microrheometry of myoblasts using fibronectin-coated beads showed increased stiffness of diseased cells. Our findings provide the first evidence that altered mechanical properties may contribute to the progressive striated muscle pathology in desminopathies. We postulate that the expression of mutant desmin leads to increased mechanical stiffness, which results in excessive mechanical stress in response to strain and consecutively to increased mechanical vulnerability and damage of muscle cells.  相似文献   

20.
Fluorescently labeled desmin was incorporated into intermediate filaments when microinjected into living tissue culture cells. The desmin, purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle and labeled with the fluorescent dye iodoacetamido rhodamine, was capable of forming a network of 10-nm filaments in solution. The labeled protein associated specifically with the native vimentin filaments in permeabilized, unfixed interphase and mitotic PtK2 cells. The labeled desmin was microinjected into living, cultured embryonic skeletal myotubes, where it became incorporated in straight fibers aligned along the long axis of the myotubes. Upon exposure to nocodazole, microinjected myotubes exhibited wavy, fluorescent filament bundles around the muscle nuclei. In PtK2 cells, an epithelial cell line, injected desmin formed a filamentous network, which colocalized with the native vimentin intermediate filaments but not with the cytokeratin networks and microtubular arrays. Exposure of the injected cells to nocadazole or acrylamide caused the desmin network to collapse and form a perinuclear cap that was indistinguishable from vimentin caps in the same cells. During mitosis, labeled desmin filaments were excluded from the spindle area, forming a cage around it. The filaments were partitioned into two groups either during anaphase or at the completion of cytokinesis. In the former case, the perispindle desmin filaments appeared to be stretched into two parts by the elongating spindle. In the latter case, a continuous bundle of filaments extended along the length of the spindle and appeared to be pinched in two by the contracting cleavage furrow. In these cells, desmin filaments were present in the midbody where they gradually were removed as the desmin filament network became redistributed throughout the cytoplasm of the spreading daughter cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号