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1.
The transmembrane tyrosine-specific protein kinase TrkB has been shown to serve as a receptor for the neurotrophic factors BDNF and NT-4. Neurotrophin binding to TrkB isoformes mediates many intracellular signaling pathways, including calcium signalling. Two truncated isoforms of the receptor, lacking the tyrosine kinase activity, signal through a yet unknown pathway. Specific signals modulate the surface expression of TrkB, which is localized in considerable amounts in intracellular pools. These intracellular pools has not been specified so far. We therefore investigated the intracellular distribution of TrkB by colocalisation studies. In contrast to the unspecific neurotrophin receptor NGFRp75, TrkB immunohistochemistry showed a staining pattern very similar to mitochondrial stainings in adult human skeletal muscle fibers. Immunofluorescence techniques revealed in different types of permeabilized cells that TrkB is bound to mitochondrial membranes. This observation was confirmed on isolated astrocyte mitoplasts. Colocalisation of the TrkB ligand NT-4 and the specific mitochondrial marker cytochrome c oxidase was also observed. Western blot analysis of isolated mitochondria from rat brain and skeletal muscle verified that a truncated isoform of TrkB is present in both, brain and muscle mitochondria, and full-length TrkB is additionally present in brain mitochondria. Our results imply that neurotrophins can be stored in mitochondria and possibly act as signalling molecules on mitochondria.  相似文献   

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In skeletal muscle, dysfunctional contractile activity has been linked to impaired intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) regulation. Muscle force production is impaired and fatigability and muscle fragility deteriorate with diabetes. Use of a novel in vivo model permits investigation of [Ca2+]i homeostasis in diabetic skeletal muscle. Within this in vivo environment we have shown that diabetes perturbs the Ca2+ regulatory system such that resting [Ca2+]i homeostasis following muscle contractions is compromised and elevations of [Ca2+]i are exacerbated. This review considers the impact of diabetes on the capacity of skeletal muscle to regulate [Ca2+]i, following muscle contractions and, in particular, the relationship between muscle fatigue and elevated [Ca2+]i in a highly ecologically relevant circulation-intact environment. Importantly, the role of mitochondria in calcium sequestration and the possibility that diabetes impacts this process is explored. Given the profound microcirculatory dysfunction in diabetes this preparation offers the unique opportunity to study the interrelationships among microvascular function, blood-myocyte oxygen flux and [Ca2+]i as they relate to enhanced muscle fatigability and exercise intolerance.  相似文献   

4.
1. KCl-induced depolarization resulted in a large stimulation of the 45Ca efflux from both cockroach skeletal muscle and rat ileal smooth muscle. 2. Caffeine (10 mM) induced a large stimulation of 45Ca efflux from skeletal muscle, but a fall in the efflux from ileal muscle, especially if the efflux was previously stimulated by KCl depolarization. 3. Caffeine inhibited calcium uptake by skeletal muscle mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum, was without effect on ileal muscle mitochondria, but significantly increased caclium binding by ileal muscle membrane vesicular preparations. 4. The induction of contractures and stimulation of 45Ca efflux in skeletal muscle by caffeine are clearly related to inhibition of intracellular calcium binding by the sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. 5. The relaxation of ileal muscle by caffeine and the inhibition of fibre calcium efflux correlate well with caffeine enhancement of intracellular calcium binding. These experiments suggest that the membrane vesicular compartment may be the main agency centrally involved in fibre calcium regulation in this muscle during the contraction-relaxation cycle.  相似文献   

5.
Nebulin and dystrophin are two high-molecular-mass skeletal muscle proteins that have both been associated with the defective gene in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, although the function of neither protein is known. Other high-molecular-mass, calmodulin-binding proteins have recently been implicated in regulating calcium release from skeletal muscle. Western blots of human skeletal muscle biopsy samples were probed with biotinylated calmodulin; nebulin was identified as a prominent high-molecular-mass calmodulin-binding protein but dystrophin did not bind detectable amounts of biotinylated calmodulin. Dystrophin was absent in a Duchenne muscle biopsy.  相似文献   

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7.
ATP-dependent oxalate facilitated calcium transport in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) preparations obtained from rabbit vastus lateralis muscle (fast skeletal muscle; Fsr) and soleus (slow skeletal muscle; Ssr) was determined. Addition of exogenous calmodulin did not stimulate calcium transport in either Fsr or Ssr preparations. Fsr and Ssr previously washed in 1 mM EGTA demonstrated a reduced capacity to transport Ca2+; the exogenous addition of calmodulin (0.24 μM) under these conditions, did not restore uptake activity but significantly decreased the steady-state level of Ca2+ uptake. Extracts of skeletal SR prepared by treatment with 0.2 mM EDTA and boiling produced significantly more stimulation of red cell Ca2+ATPase activity than extracts prepared by boiling alone. This stimulation of red cell Ca2+-ATPase was inhibited to a significant extent by 4880, a known anti-calmodulin agent. Radioimmunoassay revealed that extracts prepared by boiling or EDTA-treatment followed by boiling contained considerable amounts of calmodulin. Washing with 1 mM EGTA, though, did not release any calmodulin from SR. These studies reveal that calmodulin is present in both Fsr and Ssr and can only be removed by harsh treatments. The role of calmodulin in skeletal muscle Ca2+-transport remains to be determined.  相似文献   

8.
The neuronal Growth Associated Protein 43 (GAP43), also known as B-50 or neuromodulin, is involved in mechanisms controlling pathfinding and branching of neurons during development and regeneration. For many years this protein was classified as neuron-specific, but recent evidences suggest that a) GAP43 is expressed in the nervous system not only in neurons, but also in glial cells, and b) probably it is present also in other tissues. In particular, its expression was revealed in muscles from patients affected by various myopathies, indicating that GAP43 can no-longer considered only as a neuron-specific molecule. We have investigated the expression and subcellular localization of GAP43 in mouse satellite cells, myotubes, and adult muscle (extensor digitorum longus or EDL) using Western blotting, immuno-fluorescence combined to confocal microscopy and electron microscopy. Our in vitro results indicated that GAP43 is indeed expressed in both myoblasts and differentiating myotubes, and its cellular localization changes dramatically during maturation: in myoblasts the localization appeared to be mostly nuclear, whereas with differentiation the protein started to display a sarcomeric-like pattern. In adult fibers, GAP43 expression was evident with the protein labeling forming (in longitudinal views) a double cross striation reminiscent of the staining pattern of other organelles, such as calcium release units (CRUs) and mitochondria. Double immuno-staining and experiments done in EDL muscles fixed at different sarcomere lengths, allowed us to determine the localization, from the sarcomere Z-line, of GAP43 positive foci, falling between that of CRUs and of mitochondria. Staining of cross sections added a detail to the puzzle: GAP43 labeling formed a reticular pattern surrounding individual myofibrils, but excluding contractile elements. This work leads the way to further investigation about the possible physiological and structural role of GAP43 protein in adult fiber function and disease.  相似文献   

9.
Abnormalities of calcium homeostasis are involved in the process of cell injuries such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy characterized by the absence of the protein dystrophin. But how the absence of dystrophin leads to cytosolic calcium overload is as yet poorly understood. This question has been addressed with skeletal muscle cells from human DMD muscles or mdx mice. Although easier to obtain than human muscles, mdx muscle cells have provided controversial data concerning the resting intracellular calcium level ([Ca2+](i)). This work describes the culture of Sol8 cell line that expresses neither dystrophin nor adhalin, a dystrophin-associated protein. The [Ca2+](i)and intracellular calcium transients induced by different stimuli (acetylcholine, caffeine and high potassium) are normal during the first days of culture. At later stages, calcium homeostasis exhibits drastic alterations with a breaking down of the calcium responses and a large [Ca2+](i)elevation. Concomitantly, Sol8 cells exhibit morphological signs of cell death like cytoplasmic shrinkage and incorporation of propidium iodide. Cell death could be significantly reduced by blocking the activity of calpains, a type of calcium-regulated proteases. These results suggest that Sol8 cell line provides an alternative model of dystrophin-deficient skeletal muscle cells for which a clear disturbance of the calcium homeostasis is observed in culture in association with calpain-dependent cell death. It is shown that transfection with a plasmid cDNA permits the forced expression of dystrophin in Sol8 myotubes as well as a correct sorting of the protein. This approach could be used to explore possible interactions between dystrophin deficiency, calcium homeostasis alteration, and dystrophic cell death.  相似文献   

10.
The release of Ca2+ ions from the sarcoplasmic reticulum through ryanodine receptor calcium release channels represents the critical step linking electrical excitation to muscular contraction in the heart and skeletal muscle (excitation–contraction coupling). Two small Ca2+ binding proteins, S100A1 and calmodulin, have been demonstrated to bind and regulate ryanodine receptor in vitro. This review focuses on recent work that has revealed new information about the endogenous roles of S100A1 and calmodulin in regulating skeletal muscle excitation–contraction coupling. S100A1 and calmodulin bind to an overlapping domain on the ryanodine receptor type 1 to tune the Ca2+ release process, and thereby regulate skeletal muscle function. We also discuss past, current and future work surrounding the regulation of ryanodine receptors by calmodulin and S100A1 in both cardiac and skeletal muscle, and the implications for excitation–contraction coupling.  相似文献   

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We report here that a precipitating antibody prepared against Tetrahymena pyriformis calmodulin recognizes calcium-dependent determinants in the native protein. The ability of the antibody to precipitate 35S-labeled Tetrahymena calmodulin in direct radioimmunoassays was enhanced at least 3-fold in the presence of calcium. Competitive radioimmunoassay using homogeneous preparation of endogenously 35S-labeled Tetrahymena calmodulin and protein A-Sepharose-purified immunoglobulin G demonstrated that this antibody preparation is specific for protozoan calmodulin. Homogeneous vertebrate, invertebrate, and plant calmodulins, as well as rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C, did not show significant competition with the 35S-labeled Tetrahymena protein at concentrations 100-fold greater than that at which the homologous unlabeled Tetrahymena calmodulin produced 50% competition. A cyanogen bromide digest of Tetrahymena calmodulin also showed partial competition with the intact 35S-labeled protein, but only in the presence of calcium. The major antigenic determinants were localized to the carboxyl-terminal half of the molecule by immunoassay of limited trypsin fragments of Tetrahymena calmodulin. The antibody bound native calmodulin complexed to bovine brain phosphodiesterase (EC 3.1.4.17) but failed to recognize the Tetrahymena calmodulin carboxyl-terminal fragment (76-147) when complexed to the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Sarcolemmal properties implicated in the skeletal muscle disorder, malignant hyperthermia (MH), were examined using sarcolemma-membrane vesicles isolated from normal and MH-susceptible (MHS) porcine skeletal muscle. MHS and normal sarcolemma did not differ in the distribution of the major proteins, cholesterol or phospholipid content, vesicle size and sidedness, (Na+ + K+)-ATPase activity, ouabain binding, or adenylate cyclase activity (total and isoproterenol sensitivity). The regulation of the initial rates of MHS and normal sarcolemmal ATP-dependent calcium transport (calcium uptake after 1 min) by Ca2+ (K1/2 = 0.64-0.81 microM), calmodulin, and cAMP-dependent protein kinase were similar. However, when sarcolemmal calcium content was measured at either 2 or 20 min after the initiation of active calcium transport, a significant difference between MHS and normal sarcolemmal calcium uptake became apparent, with MHS sarcolemma accumulating approximately 25% less calcium than normal sarcolemma. Calcium transport by MHS and normal sarcolemma, at 2 or 20 min, had a similar calmodulin dependence (C1/2 = 150 nM), and was stimulated to a similar extent by cAMP-dependent protein kinase or calmodulin. Halothane inhibited MHS and normal sarcolemmal active calcium uptake in a similar fashion (half-maximal inhibition at 10 mM halothane), while dantrolene (30 microM) and nitrendipine (1 microM) had little effect on either MHS or normal sarcolemmal calcium transport. After 20 min of ATP-supported calcium uptake, 2 mM EGTA plus 10 microM sodium orthovanadate were added to initiate sarcolemmal calcium efflux. Following an initial rapid phase of calcium release, an extended slow phase of calcium efflux (k = 0.012 min-1) was similar for both MHS and normal sarcolemma vesicles. We conclude that although a number of sarcolemmal properties, including passive calcium permeability, are normal in MH, a small but significant defect in MHS sarcolemmal ATP-dependent calcium transport may contribute to the abnormal calcium homeostasis and altered contractile properties of MHS skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

14.
Left-ventricular heart muscle and pectoralis major muscle of the rat were studied to determine the intracellular localization of lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) isoenzymes. Fixation of tissue for 2 hr in 2% buffered formaldehyde provided the best preservation of the ultrastructure and enzyme activity. Total LDH activity was found diffusely in the ground substance of the sarcoplasm and in the mitochondria of the heart muscle. In skeletal muscle a strong reaction was noted in the sarcoplasmic reticulum, and moderate activity was seen in the ground substance of the sarcoplasm and in the mitochondria. Differentiation of the isoenzymes of LDH was accomplished by addition of 4 M urea or application of heat. Heart-type isoenzymes were mainly localized in the mitochondria and sarcoplasm, whereas muscle-type isoenzymes were localized mainly in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of the skeletal muscle. It is speculated that the sarcoplasmic reticulum of the skeletal muscle is the site of anaerobic glycolysis and that the sarcoplasm and mitochondria are involved primarily in aerobic metabolism of pyruvate.  相似文献   

15.
《遗传学报》2020,47(11):694-704
Mitochondria are the central hub for many metabolic processes, including the citric acid cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, and fatty acid oxidation. Recent studies have identified a new mitochondrial protein family, Fam210, that regulates bone metabolism and red cell development in vertebrates. The model organism Caenorhabditis elegans has a Fam210 gene, y56a3a.22, but it lacks both bones and red blood cells. In this study, we report that Y56A3A.22 plays a crucial role in regulating mitochondrial protein homeostasis and reproduction. The nematode y56a3a.22 is expressed in various tissues, including the intestine, muscle, hypodermis, and germline, and its encoded protein is predominantly localized in mitochondria. y56a3a.22 deletion mutants are sterile owing to impaired oogenesis. Loss of Y56A3A.22 induced mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt), which is mediated through the ATFS-1-dependent pathway, in tissues such as the intestine, germline, hypodermis, and vulval muscle. We further show that infertility and UPRmt induces by Y56A3A.22 deficiency are not attributed to systemic iron deficiency. Together, our study reveals an important role of Y56A3A.22 in regulating mitochondrial protein homeostasis and oogenesis and provides a new genetic tool for exploring the mechanisms regulating mitochondrial metabolism and reproduction as well as the fundamental role of the Fam210 family.  相似文献   

16.
Muscle uses Ca2+ as a messenger to control contraction and relies on ATP to maintain the intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis. Mitochondria are the major sub-cellular organelle of ATP production. With a negative inner membrane potential, mitochondria take up Ca2+ from their surroundings, a process called mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. Under physiological conditions, Ca2+ uptake into mitochondria promotes ATP production. Excessive uptake causes mitochondrial Ca2+ overload, which activates downstream adverse responses leading to cell dysfunction. Moreover, mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake could shape spatio-temporal patterns of intracellular Ca2+ signaling. Malfunction of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake is implicated in muscle degeneration. Unlike non-excitable cells, mitochondria in muscle cells experience dramatic changes of intracellular Ca2+ levels. Besides the sudden elevation of Ca2+ level induced by action potentials, Ca2+ transients in muscle cells can be as short as a few milliseconds during a single twitch or as long as minutes during tetanic contraction, which raises the question whether mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake is fast and big enough to shape intracellular Ca2+ signaling during excitation-contraction coupling and creates technical challenges for quantification of the dynamic changes of Ca2+ inside mitochondria. This review focuses on characterization of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake in skeletal muscle and its role in muscle physiology and diseases.  相似文献   

17.
Localization of calcium in skeletal and cardiac muscle   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Summary The requirement of calcium (Ca2+) in the excitation-contraction coupling of both skeletal and cardiac muscle is well established. However, the exact location of the intracellular storage sites of Ca2+ is not firmly established. We report here on the ultrastructural distribution of Ca2+ in white and red skeletal muscle and in cardiac muscle of the rat using combined phosphate-pyroantimonate (PPA) and oxalate-pyroantimonate (OPA) procedures. The methods are based on (a) stabilization and/or trapping of Ca2+ during the primary fixation step in glutaraldehyde by potassium phosphate or oxalate; (b) subsequent wash-out of all non-trapped cations such as Na+ and Mg2+ in potassium phosphate or oxalate; (c) conversion of the complexed or trapped Ca2+ into an electron-dense calcium pyroantimonate salt in 100 m-thick tissue sections; and (d) wash-out of the excess potassium pyroantimonate at alkaline pH.With the OPA procedure, mitochondria of all muscle types showed little precipitate. The junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum was stongly reactive in relaxed white skeletal muscle, negative in contracted white fibres and negative in red skeletal and cardiac muscle, independent of the state of relaxation-contraction. Other organelles were essentially free of deposits.With the PPA method, the precipitate was almost exclusively confined to the sarcolemma and its T-tubular invaginations in cardiac and slow skeletal muscle, and was absent in fast skeletal muscle. Apart from occasional deposits in mitochondria, all other organelles were free of precipitate. The sarcolemma-associated deposits were clearly confined to the inner leaflet of the lipid bilayer. The amount of precipitate varied within the contraction cycle, relaxed cells possessing the highest density.Exposure of the tissue to La3+ resulted in the complete absence of sarcolemma-bound precipitate suggesting that the Ca2+ is exchangeable. Furthermore, these cytological data suggest a basic difference in Ca2+ storage between white skeletal muscle on the one hand, and red skeletal and cardiac muscle on the other.  相似文献   

18.
Xi Y  Obara M  Ishida Y  Ikeda S  Yoshizato K 《Gene》2007,398(1-2):94-102
Cytoglobin (Cygb), a recently discovered vertebrate cytoplasmic heme-binding globin, is considered to be in a clade with vertebrate myoglobin (Mb), which is exclusively distributed in the cytoplasm of cardiac and skeletal muscles as an oxygen storage protein. GenBank databases (NCBI and JGI) and gene synteny analyses showed the absence of the Mb gene (mb) in two anuran amphibians, Xenopus laevis and X. tropicalis. Here we conducted comparative studies on the gene expression and tissue distribution of Cygb and Mb in anuran and reptilian tissues. Cygb and Mb genes were cloned from a reptile, iguana (Iguana iguana). Two types of cygb (cygb-1 and -2) were cloned, with lengths of 1066 and 1034 bp, and 196 and 193 amino acid residues, respectively. Their nucleotide and amino acid sequence identities were 90 and 87%, respectively. The Mb gene covered 1416 bp with an open reading frame of 465 bp, giving rise to a 154 amino acid protein. The distal ligand-binding histidine at E7, the proximal heme-binding histidine at F8, and the phenylalanine residue at CD1 were conserved in Mb and Cygb. The nucleotide and amino acid sequence identity of I. iguana cygb-1 and cygb-2 against X. laevis cygb were approximately 67% and 65%, respectively. RT-PCR demonstrated that X. laevis cygb was uniquely expressed in the heart and skeletal muscles, and faintly in the liver and spleen, which was quite contrasted with Iguana and the other vertebrates, where mb is exclusively expressed in the heart and skeletal muscles. Immunohistochemical analyses showed the distribution of Cygb in the cytoplasm of skeletal muscle cells. Interestingly, Cygb in the heart was localized in the nuclei. Considering the absence of mb in the Anura, we hypothesize that Cygb in muscle cells of anurans compensates for the lack of Mb for the storage and intracellular transportation of oxygen.  相似文献   

19.
Bolsover SR 《Cell calcium》2005,37(5):395-402
Growth cones, the motile structures at the tips of advancing axons and dendrites, respond to a wide range of cues by either turning towards or away from the cue. Cytosolic calcium signals appear to mediate a large fraction of both types of response. Calcium signals can be generated by influx through plasma membrane channels or by release from intracellular stores. While neurotransmitters can elicit calcium influx through ionotropic receptors, other chemical cues open plasma membrane voltage gated calcium channels by a mechanism other than a change of membrane voltage. In general attractive cues generate spatially and temporally restricted calcium increases that are difficult to detect using conventional indicators. One target for these calcium signals is calmodulin dependent protein kinase II. Repulsive cues generate spatially and temporally more diffuse calcium increases that can be more readily detected using fluorescent indicators. One target for these is the phosphatase calcineurin, which may act by dephosphorylating GAP43 and allowing the latter to cap actin filaments.  相似文献   

20.
Because adaptation of vertebrate photoreceptors to light is mediated by changes in the level of calcium in their outer segments (OS), proteins that bind calcium are important in phototransduction. This study has used immunofluorescence to investigate the distribution of the calcium-binding protein calmodulin within photoreceptor OS dissociated from amphibian ( Xenopus laevis) retinas. The OS of rods and cones had a streak of fluorescence to calmodulin at the ciliary axoneme. The OS of rods (but not cones) also displayed regularly spaced puncta of anti-calmodulin fluorescence along longitudinal lines coinciding with their multiple incisures. This location of calmodulin immunofluorescence closely matches the known location of microtubules within the OS of amphibian rods and cones. These findings provide evidence that calmodulin is closely associated with the microtubules of both the axonemal and incisural cytoskeletal systems in OS, and suggest that this association is important for calmodulin function in photoreceptors.  相似文献   

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