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1.
Monoclonal antibodies were prepared to stage-specific chicken pectoral muscle myosin heavy chain isoforms. From comparison of serial sections reacted with these antibodies, the myosin heavy chain isoform composition of individual myofibers was determined in denervated pectoral muscle and in regenerating myotubes that developed following cold injury of normal and denervated muscle. It was found that the neonatal myosin heavy chain reappeared in most myofibers following denervation of the pectoral muscle. Regenerating myotubes in both innervated and denervated muscle expressed all of the myosin heavy chain isoforms which have thus far been characterized in developing pectoral muscle. However, the neonatal and adult myosin heavy chains appeared more rapidly in regenerating myotubes compared to myofibers in developing muscle. While the initial expression of these isoforms in the regenerating areas was similar in innervated and denervated muscles, the neonatal myosin heavy chain did not disappear from noninnervated regenerating fibers. These results indicate that innervation is not required for the appearance of fast myosin heavy chain isoforms, but that the nerve plays some role in the repression of the neonatal myosin heavy chain.  相似文献   

2.
The expression of fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms was examined in developing bicep brachii, lateral gastrocnemius, and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of inbred normal White Leghorn chickens (Line 03) and genetically related inbred dystrophic White Leghorn chickens (Line 433). Utilizing a highly characterized monoclonal antibody library we employed ELISA, Western blot, immunocytochemical, and MHC epitope mapping techniques to determine which MHCs were present in the fibers of these muscles at different stages of development. The developmental pattern of MHC expression in the normal bicep brachii was uniform with all fibers initially accumulating embryonic MHC similar to that of the pectoralis muscle. At hatching the neonatal isoform was expressed in all fibers; however, unlike in the pectoralis muscle the embryonic MHC isoform did not disappear. With increasing age the neonatal MHC was repressed leaving the embryonic MHC as the only detectable isoform present in the adult bicep brachii muscle. While initially expressing embryonic MHC in ovo, the post-hatch normal gastrocnemius expressed both embryonic and neonatal MHCs. However, unlike the bicep brachii muscle, this pattern of expression continued in the adult muscle. The adult normal gastrocnemius stained heterogeneously with anti-embryonic and anti-neonatal antibodies indicating that mature fibers could contain either isoform or both. Neither the bicep brachii muscle nor the lateral gastrocnemius muscle reacted with the adult specific antibody at any stage of development. In the developing posterior latissimus dorsi muscle (PLD), embryonic, neonatal, and adult isoforms sequentially appeared; however, expression of the embryonic isoform continued throughout development. In the adult PLD, both embryonic and adult MHCs were expressed, with most fibers expressing both isoforms. In dystrophic neonates and adults virtually all fibers of the bicep brachii, gastrocnemius, and PLD muscles were identical and contained embryonic and neonatal MHCs. These results corroborate previous observations that there are alternative programs of fast MHC expression to that found in the pectoralis muscle of the chicken (M.T. Crow and F.E. Stockdale, 1986, Dev. Biol. 118, 333-342), and that diversification into fibers containing specific MHCs fails to occur in the fast muscle fibers of the dystrophic chicken. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that avian muscular dystrophy is a developmental disorder that is associated with alterations in isoform switching during muscle maturation.  相似文献   

3.
We have examined the types of fast myosin heavy chains (MHCs) expressed in a number of different developing chicken skeletal muscles by combining peptide mapping and immunoblotting to identify fast MHC-specific peptides among the total mixture of MHC digestion products. Using this technique, we have identified three different fast MHC patterns among the different fast and mixed (i.e., fast and slow) fiber type muscles of the adult. While the different muscles all underwent sequential changes in fast MHC isoform expression during their development, the exact sequence of these changes and the isoform patterns expressed varied from muscle to muscle. During late embryonic or fetal development, all muscles expressed a similar fast MHC pattern (designated here as the fetal pattern) which was replaced shortly after hatching with a different fast MHC pattern (the neonatal pattern). During the transition from the neonatal to the adult state that occurred sometime in the first year after hatching, many of the muscles underwent additional changes in fast MHC isoform expression. In muscles such as the pectoralis major and pectoralis minor, a new fast MHC isoform pattern was seen in the adult so that the developmental program of isoform switching in these muscles involved the sequential appearance of distinct fetal, neonatal, and adult fast MHCs. Other muscles, such as the sartorius and posterior latissimus dorsi, underwent a qualitatively different program of isoform switching and expressed as an adult a fast MHC pattern that was indistinguishable from that expressed during fetal development. Finally, in some muscles, such as the superficial biceps, no change in isoform pattern was detected during the neonatal to adult transition--in these muscles, expression of the neonatal MHC isoform pattern apparently persisted into the adult state. These data indicate that no single scheme or program of fast MHC isoform switching can describe all the developmental changes that occur in fast MHC isoform expression in the chicken and that at least three different programs of isoform switching and expression can be identified.  相似文献   

4.
Isozymes of myosin have been localized with respect to individual fibers in differentiating skeletal muscles of the rat and chicken using immunocytochemistry. The myosin light chain pattern has been analyzed in the same muscles by two-dimensional PAGE. In the muscles of both species, the response to antibodies against fast and slow adult myosin is consistent with the speed of contraction of the muscle. During early development, when speed of contraction is slow in future fast and slow muscles, all the fibers react strongly with anti-slow as well as with anti-fast myosin. As adult contractile properties are acquired, the fibers react with antibodies specific for either fast or slow myosin, but few fibers react with both antibodies. The myosin light chain pattern slow shows a change with development: the initial light chains (LC) are principally of the fast type, LC1(f), and LC2(f), independent of whether the embryonic muscle is destined to become a fast or a slow muscle in the adult. The LC3(f), light chain does not appear in significant amounts until after birth, in agreement with earlier reports. The predominance of fast light chains during early stages of development is especially evident in the rat soleus and chicken ALD, both slow muscles, in which LC1(f), is gradually replaced by the slow light chain, LC1(s), as development proceeds. Other features of the light chain pattern include an "embryonic" light chain in fetal and neonatal muscles of the rat, as originally demonstrated by R.G. Whalen, G.S. Butler- Browne, and F. Gros. (1978. J. Mol. Biol. 126:415-431.); and the presence of approximately 10 percent slow light chains in embryonic pectoralis, a fast white muscle in the adult chicken. The response of differentiating muscle fibers to anti-slow myosin antibody cannot, however, be ascribed solely to the presence of slow light chains, since antibody specific for the slow heavy chain continues to react with all the fibers. We conclude that during early development, the myosin consists of a population of molecules in which the heavy chain can be associated with a fast, slow, or embryonic light chain. Biochemical analysis has shown that this embryonic heavy chain (or chains) is distinct from adult fast or slow myosin (R.G. Whalen, K. Schwartz, P. Bouveret, S.M. Sell, and F. Gros. 1979. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:5197-5201. J.I. Rushbrook, and A. Stracher. 1979. Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:4331-4334. P.A. Benfield, S. Lowey, and D.D. LeBlanc. 1981. Biophys. J. 33(2, Pt. 2):243a[Abstr.]). Embryonic myosin, therefore, constitutes a unique class of molecules, whose synthesis ceases before the muscle differentiates into an adult pattern of fiber types.  相似文献   

5.
Types of myosin light chains and tropomyosins present in various regions and at different developmental stages of embryonic and posthatched chicken breast muscle (pectoralis major) have been characterized by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. In the embryonic muscle all areas appear to accumulate both slow and fast forms of mysoin light chains in addition to α and β forms of tropomyosin. During development regional differences in myosin and tropomyosin expression become apparent. Slow myosin subunits become gradually restricted to areas of the anterior region of the muscle and finally become localized to a small red strip found on its anterior deep surface. This red region is characterized by the presence of slow and fast myosin light chains, α-fast, α-slow, and β-tropomyosin. In all other areas of the muscle examined only fast myosin light chains, β-tropomyosin and the α-fast form of tropomyosin, are found. In addition, β-tropomyosin also gradually becomes lost in the posterior regions of the developing breast muscle. In the adult, the red strip area represents less than 1% of the total pectoralis major mass and of the myosin extracted from this area approximately 15% was present as an isozyme that comigrated on nondenaturing gels with myosin from a slow muscle (anterior latissimus dorsi). The red region accumulates therefore fast as well as slow muscle myosin. Thus while the adult chicken pectoralis major is over 99% fast white muscle, the embryonic muscle displays a significant and changing capacity to accumulate both fast and slow muscle peptides.  相似文献   

6.
The ontogeny of a primary flight muscle, the pectoralis, in the little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus: Vespertilionidae) was studied using histochemical, immunocytochemical, and electrophoretic techniques. In fetal and early neonatal (postnatal age 1–6 days) Myotis, histochemical techniques for myofibrillar ATPase (mATPase) and antibodies for slow and fast myosins demonstrated the presence of two fiber types, here called types I and IIa. These data correlated with multiple transitional myosin heavy chain isoforms and native myosin isoforms demonstrated with SDS-PAGE and 4% pyrophosphate PAGE. There was a decrease in the distribution and number of type I fibers with increasing postnatal age. At postnatal age 8–9 days, the adult phenotype was observed with regard to muscle fiber type (100% type IIa fibers) and myosin isoform profile (single adult MHC and native myosin isoforms). This “adult” fiber type profile and myosin isoform composition preceeded adult function by about 2 weeks. For example, little brown bats were incapable of sustained flight until approximately postnatal day 24, and myofiber size did not achieve adult size until approximately postnatal day 25. Although Myotis pectoralis is unique in being composed of 100% type IIa fibers, transitional fiber types and isoforms were present. These transitional forms had been observed previously in other mammals bearing mixed adult muscle fibers and which undergo transitional stages in muscle ontogeny. However, in Myotis pectoralis, this transition transpires relatively early in development. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
Regenerating areas of adult chicken fast muscle (pectoralis major) and slow muscle (anterior latissimus dorsi) were examined in order to determine synthesis patterns of myosin light chains, heavy chains and tropomyosin. In addition, these patterns were also examined in muscle cultures derived from satellite cells of adult fast and slow muscle. One week after cold-injury the regenerating fast muscle showed a pattern of synthesis that was predominately embryonic. These muscles synthesized the embryonic myosin heavy chain, beta-tropomyosin and reduced amounts of myosin fast light chain-3 which are characteristic of embryonic fast muscle but synthesized very little myosin slow light chains. The regenerating slow muscle, however, showed a nearly complete array of embryonic peptides including embryonic myosin heavy chain, fast and slow myosin light chains and both alpha-fast and slow tropomyosins. Peptide map analysis of the embryonic myosin heavy chains synthesized by regenerating fast and slow muscles showed them to be identical. Thus, in both muscles there is a return to embryonic patterns during regeneration but this return appears to be incomplete in the pectoralis major. By 4 weeks postinjury both regenerating fast and slow muscles had stopped synthesizing embryonic isoforms of myosin and tropomyosin and had returned to a normal adult pattern of synthesis. Adult fast and slow muscles yielded a satellite cell population that formed muscle fibers in culture. Fibers derived from either population synthesized the embryonic myosin heavy chain in addition to alpha-fast and beta-tropomyosin. Thus, muscle fibers derived in culture from satellite cells of fast and slow muscles synthesized a predominately embryonic pattern of myosin heavy chains and tropomyosin. In addition, however, the satellite cell-derived myotubes from fast muscle synthesized only fast myosin light chains while the myotubes derived from slow muscle satellite cells synthesized both fast and slow myosin light chains. Thus, while both kinds of satellite cells produced embryonic type myotubes in culture the overall patterns were not identical. Satellite cells of fast and slow muscle appear therefore to have diverged from each other in their commitment during maturation in vivo.  相似文献   

8.
The myosin isozymes present in the developing rat soleus muscle from 1 week to 6 weeks after birth were investigated using biochemical and immunological methods. Electrophoresis of native myosin reveals that adult slow myosin is present in the soleus as early as 1 week after birth. At this time, embryonic and neonatal myosin can also be demonstrated. Using an immunotransfer technique, the presence of slow myosin heavy chain can be demonstrated at all time points examined whereas neonatal myosin heavy chain diminishes in quantity between 2 and 3 weeks, and is undetectable in the adult soleus. Specific polyclonal antibodies were prepared to embryonic, neonatal, and adult fast and slow myosins. Immunocytochemistry reveals a cellular heterogeneity at all stages examined. Different combinations of myosin isozymes can be found in the soleus fibers depending on the stage of development; these results suggest therefore that myosin isozyme transitions are occurring. Approximately half the fibers contain embryonic and slow myosin at 1 week after birth; these fibers subsequently contain only slow myosin. A second group of fibers contains embryonic and neonatal myosin at 1 week and most of them subsequently accumulate adult fast myosin. A portion of this latter group begins to acquire slow myosin from 4 weeks of age. These data are interpreted to suggest that a preprogrammed sequence of myosin isozymes is embryonic----neonatal----adult fast. At any time during development of an individual fiber, induction of slow myosin accumulation and repression of other types can occur.  相似文献   

9.
Colloidal gold-conjugated monoclonal antibodies were prepared to stage-specific fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms of developing chicken pectoralis major (PM). Native thick filaments from different stages of development were reacted with these antibodies and examined in the electron microscope to determine their myosin isoform composition. Filaments prepared from 12-d embryo, 10-d chick, and 1-yr chicken muscle specifically reacted with the embryonic (EB165), neonatal (2E9), and adult (AB8) antimyosin gold-conjugated monoclonal antibodies, respectively. The myosin isoform composition was more complex in thick filaments from stages of pectoral muscle where more than one isoform was simultaneously expressed. In 19-d embryo muscle where both embryonic and neonatal isoforms were present, three classes of filaments were found. One class of filaments reacted only with the embryonic antibody, a second class reacted only with the neonatal-specific antibody, and a third class of filaments were decorated by both antibodies. Similar results were obtained with filaments prepared from 44-d chicken PM where the neonatal and adult fast MHCs were expressed. These observations demonstrate that two myosin isoforms can exist in an individual thick filament in vivo. Immunoelectron microscopy was also used to determine the specific distribution of different fast MHC isoforms within individual filaments from different stages of development. The anti-embryonic and anti-adult antibodies uniformly decorated both homogeneous and heterogeneous thick filaments. The neonatal specific antibody uniformly decorated homogeneous filaments; however, it preferentially decorated the center of heterogeneous filaments. These observations suggest that neonatal MHC may play a specific role in fibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
Cultured chick embryo skeletal muscle cells normally synthesize only the embryonic isoform of mysoin. We have found that aneural muscle cultures that become or are provoked into an extremely contractile state will begin to synthesize a pattern of myosin light chains typical of maturing muscle. Immunoblots with neonatal and adult specific monoclonal antibodies did not reveal a corresponding isozyme transition in myosin heavy chain. These results demonstrate a correlation between contractility and the regulation of myosin light chain maturation, and also suggest that the transitions of heavy and light chain synthesis during development do not appear to be under close coordinate regulation.  相似文献   

11.
The dwarf mutant is an autosomal recessive mutation of the mouse which causes a defective development of those anterior pituitary cells responsible for the production of thyroid-stimulating hormone, growth hormone, and prolactin. These mice are thus genetically hypothyroid and provide a model system in which one can investigate the influence of thyroid hormone on the transitions of the myosin heavy chain isoforms. We have carried out a qualitative and quantitative investigation of the myosin heavy chain isoforms present at various developmental stages and following one injection of 1 microgram of thyroxine. Myosin heavy chains were identified by nondissociating gel electrophoresis, localized by indirect immunofluorescence, and quantitated by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique. We find that in skeletal muscle, the appearance of the adult fast myosin heavy chain is severely retarded, that the neonatal myosin heavy chain is never totally eliminated, and that there is an overall increase in the number of fibers containing slow myosin heavy chain. In cardiac tissue the adult phenotype is never attained and beta-cardiac myosin heavy chain remains the predominant isoform. A single injection of 1 microgram of thyroxine was sufficient to cause a slight acceleration in the appearance of the adult fast myosin heavy chain in skeletal muscle, but only after 6-8 days. However, in the cardiac muscle, one injection of thyroxine resulted in a more rapid but transient expression of the alpha-cardiac myosin heavy chain, suggesting that the mechanism of action of thyroid hormone is different in these two tissues.  相似文献   

12.
Emergence of the mature myosin phenotype in the rat diaphragm muscle   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Immunohistochemical analysis of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform expression in perinatal and adult rat diaphragm muscles was performed with antibodies which permitted the identification of all known MHC isoforms found in typical rat muscles. Isoform switching, leading to the emergence of the adult phenotype, was more complex than had been previously described. As many as four isoforms could be coexpressed in a single myofiber. Elimination of developmental isoforms did not usually result in the myofiber immediately achieving its adult phenotype. Activation of genes for specific adult isoforms might be delayed to puberty. For example, two of the three fast MHCs, MHC2X and MHC2A appeared perinatally, while MHC2B did not appear until 30 days postnatal. By Day 60 this isoform was present in approximately 27% of the myofibers, but in most myofibers expression of this isoform was transient (i.e., at Day greater than or equal to 115, less than 4% of the myofibers expressed MHC2B). Fibers which contained MHC beta/slow during the late fetal and early neonatal period coexpressed MHCemb. A marked increase in the frequency of fibers containing MHC beta/slow occurred between 4 and 21 days postnatal. These slow fibers arose from a population of myofibers which expressed MHCemb and MHCneo during their development, and they accounted for the majority of slow fibers found in the adult diaphragm. The adult myosin phenotype of the diaphragm myofibers (as determined with immunocytochemistry, and 5% SDS-PAGE) was not achieved until the rat was greater than or equal to 115 days old.  相似文献   

13.
Myosin isoforms contribute to the heterogeneity and adaptability of skeletal muscle fibers. Besides the well-characterized slow and fast muscle myosins, there are those isoforms that appear transiently during the course of muscle development. At a stage of development when two different myosins are coexpressed, the possibility arises for the existence of heterodimers, molecules containing two different heavy chains, or homodimers, molecules with two identical heavy chains. The question of whether neonatal and adult myosin isoforms can associate to form a stable heterodimer was addressed by using stage-specific monoclonal antibodies in conjunction with immunological and electron microscopic techniques. We find that independent of the ratio of adult to neonatal myosin, depending on the age of the animal, the myosin heavy chains form predominantly homodimeric molecules. The small amount of hybrid species present suggests that either the rod portion of the two heavy chain isoforms differs too much in sequence to form a stable alpha-helical coiled coil, or that the biosynthesis of the heavy chains precludes the formation of heterodimeric molecules.  相似文献   

14.
An antibody to chicken ventricular myosin was found to cross-react by enzyme immunoassay with myosin heavy chains from embryonic chicken pectorials, but not with adult skeletal myosins. This antibody, which was previously shown to label cultured muscle cells from embryonic pectoralis (Cantini et al., J cell biol 85 (1981) 903), was used to investigate by indirect immunofluorescence the reactivity of chicken skeletal muscle cells differentiating in vivo during embryonic development and muscle regeneration. Muscle fibers in 11-day old chick embryonic pectoralis and anterior latissimus dorsi muscles showed a differential reactivity with this antibody. Labelled fibers progressively decreasgd in number during subsequent stages and disappeared completely around hatching. Only rare small muscle fibers, some of which had the shape and location typical of satellite elements, were labelled in adult chicken muscle. A cold injury was produced with dry ice in the fast pectoralis and the slow anterior latissimys dorsi muscles of young chickens. Two days after injury a number of labelled cells was first seen in the intermediate region between the outer necrotic area and the underlying uninjured muscle. These muscle cells rapidly increased in number and size, thin myotubes were seen after 3 days and by 4–5 days a superficial layer of brightly stained newly formed muscle fibers was observed at the site of the injury. Between one and two weeks after the lesion the intensity of staining of regenerated fibers progressively decreased as their size further increased. These findings indicate that an embryonic type of myosin heavy chain is transitorily expressed during muscle regeneration.  相似文献   

15.
Two monoclonal antibodies specific for smooth muscle myosin (designated SM-E7 and SM-A9) and one monoclonal anti-(human platelet myosin) antibody (designated NM-G2) have been used to study myosin heavy chain composition of smooth muscle cells in adult and in developing rabbit aorta. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting experiments revealed that adult aortic muscle consisted of two myosin heavy chains (MCH) of smooth muscle type, named MHC-1 (205 kDa), and MHC-2 (200 kDa). In the fetal/neonatal stage of development, vascular smooth muscle was found to contain only MHC-1 but not MHC-2. Non-muscle myosin heavy chain, which showed the same electrophoretic mobility as the slower migrating MHC, was expressed in an inverse manner with respect to MHC-2, i.e. it was detectable only in the early stages of development. The distinct pattern of smooth and non-muscle myosin isoform expression during development may be related to the different functional properties of smooth muscle cells during vascular myogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
Fetal rat skeletal muscles express a troponin T (TnT) isoform similar to the TnT isoform expressed in the embryonic heart with respect to electrophoretic mobility and immunoreactivity with cardiac TnT-specific monoclonal antibodies. Immunoblotting analyses reveal that both the embryonic and the adult isoforms of cardiac TnT are transiently expressed during the neonatal stages. In addition, other TnT species, different from both cardiac TnTs and from the TnT isoforms expressed in adult muscles, are present in skeletal muscles during the first two postnatal weeks. By immunocytochemistry, cardiac TnT is detectable at the somitic stage and throughout embryonic and fetal development, and disappears during the first weeks after birth, persisting exclusively in the bag fibers of the muscle spindles. Cardiac TnT is re-expressed in regenerating muscle fibers following a cold injury and in mature muscle fibers after denervation. Developmental regulation of this TnT variant is not coordinated with that of the embryonic myosin heavy chain with respect to timing of disappearance and cellular distribution. No obligatory correlation between the two proteins is likewise found in regenerating and denervated muscles.  相似文献   

17.
The pectoralis muscle (M. pectoralis) of many premier soaring birds contains a smaller, accessory, deep belly in addition to the much larger superficial belly found in all flying birds. Here we describe the muscle fiber types in both the superficial and deep bellies of the pectoralis of one such adept soaring species, the white pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos).Histochemical techniques are used to demonstrate both nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (reduced) and myofibrillar adenosine triphosphatase activities within the muscle fibers. Immunocytochemical methods employing several monoclonal antibodies, each directed against a different myosin heavy chain epitope of the chicken, are also used to characterize the fibers. While the superficial belly of the muscle consists entirely of fast-twitch oxidative-glycolytic fibers, the deep belly is composed exclusively of slow fibers. These slow fibers are labelled by two different antibodies specific for chicken slow myosin. We suggest that the fibers of the superficial belly are best suited to flapping flight, and that the fibers of the deep belly would be recruited only during soaring flight. Furthermore, we hypothesize that the deep belly found in the pectoralis of soaring species probably evolved from a deep neuromuscular compartment of the superficial belly.  相似文献   

18.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1988,90(2):151-160
Muscle spindles were either deafferented or deefferented by selectively severing the sensory or motor nerve supply to neonatal soleus muscles of rats at a time when spindles are formed but when intrafusal muscle fibers are structurally and immunocytochemically immature. Experimental muscles were excised two months after nerve section. Control and experimental spindles were examined using monoclonal antibodies specific for myosin heavy chains of slow-tonic (ALD58) and fast-twitch (MF30) chicken muscles. Only intrafusal fibers bound these antibodies in intact soleus muscles. The deefferented spindles exhibited a pattern of ALD58 and MF30 binding similar to that of normal adult intrafusal fibers, whereas deafferented intrafusal fibers were unreactive with the two antibodies. Thus intact sensory innervation is essential for myosin heavy chain expression in intrafusal muscle fibers during postnatal development of rat spindles.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Muscle spindles were either deafferented or deefferented by selectively severing the sensory or motor nerve supply to neonatal soleus muscles of rats at a time when spindles are formed but when intrafusal muscle fibers are structurally and immunocytochemically immature. Experimental muscles wereexcised two months after nerve section. Control and experimental spindles were examined using monoclonal antibodies specific for myosin heavy chains of slow-tonic (ALD58) and fast-twitch (MF30) chicken muscles. Only intrafusal fibers bound these antibodies in intact soleus muscles. The deefferented spindles exhibited a pattern of ALD58 and MF30 binding similar to that of normal adult intrafusal fibers, whereas deafferented intrafusal fibers were unreactive with the two antibodies. Thus intact sensory innervation is essential for myosin heavy chain expression in intrafusal muscle fibers during postnatal development of rat spindles.  相似文献   

20.
Distribution of myosin isoenzymes among skeletal muscle fiber types.   总被引:17,自引:4,他引:13  
Using an immunocytochemical approach, we have demonstrated a preferential distribution of myosin isoenzymes with respect to the pattern of fiber types in skeletal muscles of the rat. In an earlier study, we had shown that fluorescein-labeled antibody against "white" myosin from the chicken pectoralis stained all the white, intermediate and about half the red fibers of the rat diaphragm, a fast-twitch muscle (Gauthier and Lowey, 1977). We have now extended this study to include antibodies prepared against the "head" (S1) and "rod" portions of myosin, as well as the alkali- and 5,5'dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB)-light chains. Antibodies capable of distinguishing between alkali 1 and alkali 2 type myosin were also used to localize these isoenzymes in the same fast muscle. We observed, by both direct and indirect immunofluorescence, that the same fibers which had reacted previously with antibodies against white myosin reacted with antibodies to the proteolytic subfragments and to the low molecular-weight subunits of myosin. These results confirm our earlier conclusion that the myosins of the reactive fibers in rat skeletal muscle are sufficiently similar to share antigenic determinants. The homology, furthermore, is not confined to a limited region of the myosin molecule, but includes the head and rod portions and all classes of light chains. Despite the similarities, some differences exist in the protein compositions of these fibers: antibodies to S1 did not stain the reactive (fast) red fiber as strongly as they did the white and intermediate fibers. Non-uniform staining was also observed with antibodies specific for A2 myosin; the fast red fiber again showed weaker fluorescence than did the other reactive fibers. These results could indicate a variable distribution of myosin isoenzymes according to their alkali-light chain composition among fiber types. Alternatively, there may exist yet another myosin isoenzyme which is localized in the fast red fiber. Those red fibers which did not react with any of the antibodies to pectoralis myosin, did react strongly with an antibody against myosin isolated from the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD), a slow red muscle of the chicken. The myosin in these fibers (slow red fibers) is, therefore, distinct from the other myosin isoenzymes. In the rat soleus, a slow-twitch muscle, the majority of the fibers reacted only with antibody against ALD myosin. A minority, however, reacted with antiboddies to pectoralis as well as ALD myosin, which indicates that both fast and slow myosin can coexist within the same fiber of a normal adult muscle. These immunocytochemical studies have emphasized that a wide range of isoenzymes may contribute to the characteristic physiological properties of individual fiber types in a mixed muscle.  相似文献   

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