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1.
We studied the localization of desmin (skeletin), the major protein subunit of muscle-type intermediate filaments, in adult chicken cardiac muscle by high resolution immunoelectron microscopic labeling of ultrathin frozen sections of the intact fixed tissues. We carried out single labeling for desmin and double labeling for both desmin and either vinculin or alpha-actinin. In areas removed from the intercalated disk membranes, we observed desmin labeling between adjacent Z-bands in every interfibrillar space. Where these spaces were wide and contained mitochondria, convoluted strands of desmin labeling bridged between the periphery of neighboring Z-bands and the mitochondria. The intermediate filaments appeared to be organized in a more three-dimensional manner within the interfibrillar spaces of cardiac as compared to skeletal muscle. Near the intercalated disks, desmin labeling was intense within the interfibrillar spaces, but was completely segregated from the microfilament attachment sites (fascia adherens) where vinculin and alpha-actinin were localized. Desmin therefore appears to play no role in the attachment of microfilaments to the intercalated disk membrane. We discuss the role of intermediate filaments in the organization of cardiac and skeletal striated muscle in the light of these and other results.  相似文献   

2.
When ultrathin frozen sections of chicken cardiac muscle were osmicated, dehydrated in ethanol, embedded in ethyl cellulose, and stained with acidic uranyl acetate, filaments of 10-12 nm width were visualized in wide interfibrillar spaces. Immunostaining of the frozen sections for desmin resulted in exclusive labeling of such filaments. These observations indicated that longitudinally oriented networks of intermediate filaments were present in the interfibrillar spaces, in addition to the transversely oriented networks that surround myofibrils at the level of Z band. As in skeletal muscle (Tokuyasu, K. T., A. H. Dutton, and S. J. Singer, 1983, J. Cell Biol. 97:1727-1735), desmin in chicken cardiac muscle is believed to be largely, if not entirely, in the form of intermediate filaments.  相似文献   

3.
Plectin (M(r) > 500,000) is a versatile and widely expressed cytolinker protein. In striated muscle it is predominantly found at the Z-disc level where it colocalizes with the intermediate filament protein desmin. Both proteins show altered labeling patterns in tissues of muscular dystrophy patients. Moreover, mutations in the plectin gene lead to the autosomal recessive human disorder epidermolysis bullosa simplex with muscular dystrophy, and defects in the desmin gene have been shown to cause familiar cardiac and skeletal myopathy. Since intermediate filaments (IFs) in striated muscle tissue have been found to be intimately associated with mitochondria, we investigated whether plectin is involved in this association. Using postembedding immunogold labeling of Lowicryl sections and immunogold labeling of ultrathin cryosections, we show that plectin is associated with desmin IFs linking myofibrils to mitochondria at the level of the Z-disc and along the entire length of the sarcomere. The localization of plectin label at the mitochondrial membrane itself was consistent with a putative linker function of plectin between desmin IFs and the mitochondrial surface. In mitochondrion-rich muscle fibers, both plectin and desmin were part of an ordered arrangement of mitochondrial side branches, which wound around myofibrils adjacent to the Z-discs and were anchored into a filamentous network transversing from one fibril to the other. The association of mitochondria with plectin and IFs was seen also in tissues without regular distribution patterns of mitochondria, such as heart muscle and neonatal skeletal muscle tissues. These data were supplemented with in vitro binding assays showing direct interaction of plectin with desmin via its carboxy-terminal IF-binding domain. As a cytolinker protein associated with mitochondria and desmin IFs, plectin could play an important role in the positioning and shape formation, in particular branching, of mitochondrial organelles in striated muscle tissues.  相似文献   

4.
Monoclonal antibodies ( McAbs ) have been generated against a preparation of intermediate filament proteins (IFP) from adult chicken gizzard. Two antibodies, D3 and D76 , have been characterized in detail. They bind specifically to desmin but recognize different epitopes. In the adult chicken, both McAbs produced equivalent immunofluorescent staining patterns, reacting in frozen sections with all forms of muscle tissue, including vascular smooth muscle, but with no other tissue types. In isolated skeletal myofibrils and in longitudinal frozen sections of cardiac and skeletal muscle, desmin was detected with both McAbs at the Z-band and in longitudinally-oriented filament bundles between myofibrils. In contrast to these results in the adult, the intermediate filaments (IF) of embryonic cardiac myocytes in primary cultures were decorated only with McAb D3, whereas McAb D76 was completely unreactive with these cells. Similarly, frozen sections through the heart at early stages of embryonic chick development (Hamburger-Hamilton stages 17-18) revealed regions of myocytes, identified by double immunofluorescence with myosin-specific McAbs , that were unstained with McAb D76 even though similar regions were stained by McAb D3. That McAb D76 reacted with desmin in all adult cardiac myocytes but not with all embryonic heart cells indicates that embryonic and adult cardiac IF are immunologically distinct and implies a conversion in IF immunoreactivity during cardiac development.  相似文献   

5.
Eukaryotic cells have highly organized, interconnected intracellular compartments. The nuclear surface and cytoplasmic cytoskeletal filaments represent compartments involved in such an association. Intermediate filaments are the major cytoskeletal elements in this association. Desmin is a muscle-specific structural protein and one of the earliest known muscle-specific genes to be expressed during cardiac and skeletal muscle development. Desmin filaments have been shown to be associated with the nuclear surface in the myogenic cell line C2C12. Previous studies have revealed that mice lacking desmin develop imperfect muscle, exhibiting the loss of nuclear shape and positioning. In the present work, we have analyzed the association between desmin filaments and the outer nuclear surface in nuclei isolated from pectoral skeletal muscle of chick embryos and in primary chick myogenic cell cultures by using immunofluorescence microscopy, negative staining, immunogold, and transmission electron microscopy. We show that desmin filaments remain firmly attached to the outer nuclear surface after the isolation of nuclei. Furthermore, positive localization of desmin persists after gentle washing of the nuclei with high ionic strength solutions. These data suggest that desmin intermediate filaments are stably and firmly connected to the outer nuclear surface in skeletal muscles cells in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Desmin and vimentin coexist at the periphery of the myofibril Z disc.   总被引:61,自引:0,他引:61  
B L Granger  E Lazarides 《Cell》1979,18(4):1053-1063
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis has revealed that vimentin, the predominant subunit of intermediate filaments in cells of mesenchymal origin, is a component of isolated skeletal myofibrils. It thus coexists in mature muscle fibers with desmin, the major subunit of muscle intermediate filaments. Antisera to desmin and vimentin, shown to be specific for their respective antigens by two-dimensional immunoautoradiography, have been used in immunofluorescence to demonstrate that vimentin has the same distribution as desmin in skeletal muscle. Both desmin and vimentin surround each myofibril Z disc and form honeycomb-like networks within each Z plane of the muscle fiber. This distribution is complementary to that of alpha-actinin within a given Z plane. Desmin and vimentin may thus be involved in maintaining the lateral registration of sarcomeres by transversely linking adjacent myofibrils at their Z discs. This linkage would support and integrate the fiber as a whole, and provide a molecular basis for the cross-striated appearance of skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

7.
The distribution of the intermediate filament proteins vimentin and desmin in developing and mature myotubes in vivo was studied by single and double immunoelectron microscopic labeling of ultrathin frozen sections of iliotibialis muscle in 7-21-d-old chick embryos, and neonatal and 1-d-old postnatal chicks. This work is an extension of our previous immunofluorescence studies of the same system (Tokuyasu, K. T., P. A. Maher and S. J. Singer, 1984, J. Cell Biol., 98:1961-1972). In immature myotubes of 7-11-d embryos, significant labeling for desmin and vimentin was found only in intermediate filaments, and these proteins coexisted in the same individual filaments. Each of the two proteins was present in irregular clusters along the entire length of a filament. No exclusively vimentin- or desmin-containing filaments were observed at this stage. In the early myotubes, the intermediate filaments were essentially all longitudinally oriented, even when they contained three times as much desmin as vimentin. No special relationship was recognized between the dispositions of the filaments and the organization of the myofibrils. Occasionally, several myofibrils were already aligned in lateral registry at this early stage, but labeling for desmin and vimentin was largely absent at the level of the Z bands. Instead, the Z bands appeared to be covered by elements of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The confinement of intermediate filaments to the level of the Z bands occurred in the myotubes of later embryos after the extensive lateral registry of the Z bands. Thus, intermediate filaments are unlikely to play a primary role in producing the lateral registration of myofibrils during myogenesis, but may be important in determining the polarization of the early myotube and the alignment of its organelles. Throughout the development of myotubes, desmin and vimentin remained in the form of intermediate filaments, although the number of filaments per unit volume of myotube appeared to be reduced as myofibrils increased in number in maturing myotubes. This observation indicated that the transverse orientation of intermediate filaments in mature myotubes does not result from the de novo polymerization of subunits from Z band to Z band, but a continuous shifting of the positions and directions of intact filaments.  相似文献   

8.
The vertebrate muscle Z-band organizes and tethers antiparallel actin filaments in adjacent sarcomeres and hence propagates the tension generated by the actomyosin interaction during muscular contraction. The axial width of the Z-band varies with fibre and muscle type: fast twitch muscles have narrow (approximately 30-50 nm) Z-bands, while slow-twitch and cardiac muscles have wide (approximately 100-140 nm) Z-bands. In electron micrographs of longitudinal sections of fast fibres like those found in fish body white muscle, the Z-band appears as a characteristic zigzag layer of density connecting the mutually offset actin filament arrays in adjacent sarcomeres. Wide Z-bands in slow fibres such as the one studied here (bovine neck muscle) show a stack of three or four zigzag layers. The variable Z-band width incorporating variable numbers of zigzag layers presumably relates to the different mechanical properties of the respective muscles. Three-dimensional reconstructions of Z-bands reveal that individual zigzag layers are often composed of more than one set of protein bridges, called Z-links, probably alpha-actinin, between oppositely oriented actin filaments. Fast muscle Z-bands comprise two or three layers of Z-links. Here we have applied Fourier reconstruction methods to obtain clear three-dimensional density maps of the Z-bands in beef muscle. The bovine slow muscle investigated here reveals a Z-band comprising six sets of Z-links, which, due to their shape and the way their projected densities overlap, appear in longitudinal sections as either three or four zigzag layers, depending on the lattice view. There has been great interest recently in the suggestion that Z-band variability with fibre type may be due to differences in the repetitive region (tandem Z-repeats) in the Z-band part of titin (also called connectin). We discuss this in the context of our results and present a systematic classification of Z-band types according to the numbers of Z-links and titin Z-repeats.  相似文献   

9.
Plectin is a versatile cytoskeletal linker protein that preferentially localizes at interfaces between intermediate filaments and the plasma membrane in muscle, epithelial cells, and other tissues. Its deficiency causes muscular dystrophy with epidermolysis bullosa simplex. To better understand the functional roles of plectin beneath the sarcolemma of skeletal muscles and to gain some insights into the underlying mechanism of plectin-deficient muscular dystrophy, we studied in vivo structural and molecular relationships of plectin to subsarcolemmal cytoskeletal components, such as desmin, dystrophin, and vinculin, in rat skeletal muscles. Immunogold electron microscopy revealed that plectin fine threads tethered desmin intermediate filaments onto subsarcolemmal dense plaques overlying Z-lines and I-bands. These dense plaques were found to contain dystrophin and vinculin, and thus may be the structural basis of costameres. The in vivo association of plectin with desmin, (meta-)vinculin, dystrophin, and actin was demonstrated by immunoprecipitation experiments. Treatment of plectin immunoprecipitates with gelsolin reduced actin, dystrophin, and (meta-)vinculin but not desmin, implicating that subsarcolemmal actin could partly mediate the interaction between plectin and dystrophin or (meta-)vinculin. Altogether, our data suggest that plectin, along with desmin intermediate filaments, might serve a vital structural role in the stabilization of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

10.
Smooth muscle basic calponin, a major actin-, tropomyosin-, and calmodulin-binding protein, has been examined for its ability to interact with desmin intermediate filaments from smooth muscle cells using sedimentation analysis, turbidity changes, chemical cross-linking, matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI TOF/MS), and electron microscopic observations. Calponin interacted with desmin intermediate filaments in a concentration-dependent manner in vitro. The binding of calponin to desmin produced dense aggregates at 30 degrees C. The dense aggregates were observed by electron microscopy to be composed of large anisotropic bundles of desmin filaments, indicating that calponin forms bundles of desmin filaments. The addition of calmodulin or S100 to the mixture of calponin and desmin caused the removal of calponin from the desmin filaments and inhibited bundle formation in the presence of Ca(2+), but not in the presence of EGTA. Calponin-related proteins including G-actin, tropomyosin, and SM22, had little effect on the binding of calponin to desmin filaments, whereas tubulin weakly inhibited the binding. Desmin had little influence on the calponin-actin and calponin-tubulin interactions using the zero-length cross-linker, EDC. Domain mapping with chymotryptic digestion showed that the binding site of calponin resides within the central a-helical rod domain of the desmin molecule. The chemical cross-linked products of calponin and synthetic peptides (TQ27, TNEKVELQELNDRFANYIEKVRFLEQQ; EE24, EEELRELRRQVDALTGQRARVEVE) derived from the rod domain were detected by MALDI TOF/MS. Furthermore, the calponin-desmin interaction was significantly inhibited by the addition of EE24, but only slightly by TQ27. These results suggest that calponin may act as a cross-linking protein between desmin filaments as well as among intermediate filaments, microfilaments and microtubules in smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

11.
Myoepithelial cells from mammary glands, the modified sweat glands of bovine muzzle, and salivary glands have been studied by electron microscopy and by immunofluorescence microscopy in frozen sections in an attempt to further characterize the type of intermediate-sized filaments present in these cells. Electron microscopy has shown that all myoepithelial cells contain extensive meshworks of intermediate-sized (7--11-nm) filaments, many of which are anchored at typical desmosomes or hemidesmosomes. The intermediate-sized filaments are also intimately associated with masses of contractile elements, identified as bundles of typical 5--6-nm microfilaments and with characteristically spaced dense bodies. This organization resembles that described for various smooth muscle cells. In immunofluorescence microscopy, using antibodies specific for the various classes of intermediate-sized filaments, the myoepithelial cells are strongly decorated by antibodies to prekeratin. They are not specifically stained by antibodies to vimentin, which stain mesenchymal cells, nor by antibodies to chick gizzard desmin, which decorate fibrils in smooth muscle Z bands and intercalated disks in skeletal and cardiac muscle of mammals. Myoepithelial cells are also strongly stained by antibodies to actin. The observations show (a) that the epithelial character, as indicated by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the prekeratin type, is maintained in the differentiated contractile myoepithelial cell, and (b) that desmin and desmin-containing filaments are not generally associated with musclelike cell specialization for contraction but are specific to myogenic differentiation. The data also suggest that in myoepithelial cells prekeratin filaments are arranged--and might function--in a manner similar to the desmin filaments in smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

12.
Filaments with a diameter of 80-120 A have been prepared from 14-d-old chick embryonic skeletal muscle, using a physiological salt solution and gel filtration chromatography. The filaments obtained are composed of the two known muscle intermediate-filament proteins, vimentin and desmin, as well as the vimentin- and desmin-associated high molecular weight protein, synemin (230,000 mol. wt). In addition, they contain a previously unidentified high molecular weight protein (280,000 mol wt) which differs from synemin by isoelectric point, molecular weight, and immunological reactivity. Immunofluorescence on cultured myogenic cells,using antisera to the 280,000-dalton polypeptide, has revealed that this protein has the same spatial distribution as desmin, vimentin, and synemin in both early myotubes, where it associates with cytoplasmic filaments, and late in myotubes, where it is associated with myofibril Z lines. Examination by immunofluorescence of frozen sections of developing embryonic skeletal muscle reveals a gradual diminution in the presence of the 280,000-dalton protein. The 280,000-dalton protein is undetectable in adult skeletal and smooth muscle, as shown by immunofluorescence and immunoautoradiography. In chick embryonic fibroblasts grown in tissue culture, only a subpopulation of the cells is reactive with antibodies to the 280,000-dalton protein even though all these cells contain vimentin. In the reactive cells, vimentin and the 280,000-dalton polypeptide exhibit an indistinguishable cytoplasmic filamentous network, which aggregates into filamentious bundles when the cells are exposed to colcemid. These results suggest that this newly identified high molecular weight protein is closely associated with intermediate filaments containing either vimentin alone or vimentin, desmin and synemin. The expression of this protein appears to be developmentally regulated and does not appear to parallel the expression of any of the other three intermediate-filament proteins. The absence of the 280,000-dalton polypeptide in adult muscle cells and its gradual reduction during development implies that is probably not required for the maintenance of Z-disk structure after the assembly of the sarcomere.  相似文献   

13.
Balogh J  Li Z  Paulin D  Arner A 《Biophysical journal》2005,88(2):1156-1165
Intermediate filaments composed of desmin interlink Z-disks and sarcolemma in skeletal muscle. Depletion of desmin results in lower active stress of smooth, cardiac, and skeletal muscles. Structural functions of intermediate filaments in fast (psoas) and slow (soleus) skeletal muscle were examined using x-ray diffraction on permeabilized muscle from desmin-deficient mice (Des-/-) and controls (Des+/+). To examine lateral compliance of sarcomeres and cells, filament distances and fiber width were measured during osmotic compression with dextran. Equatorial spacing (x-ray diffraction) of contractile filaments was wider in soleus Des-/- muscle compared to Des+/+, showing that desmin is important for maintaining lattice structure. Osmotic lattice compression was similar in Des-/- and Des+/+. In width measurements of single fibers and bundles, Des-/- soleus were more compressed by dextran compared to Des+/+, showing that intermediate filaments contribute to whole-cell compliance. For psoas fibers, both filament distance and cell compliance were similar in Des-/- and Des+/+. We conclude that desmin is important for stabilizing sarcomeres and maintaining cell compliance in slow skeletal muscle. Wider filament spacing in Des-/- soleus cannot, however, explain the lower active stress, but might influence resistance to stretch, possibly minimizing stretch-induced cell injury.  相似文献   

14.
The composition of intermediate filaments in pericytes was examined by immunofluorescent and immunoelectron microscopic labeling of frozen sections of various chicken microvascular beds in situ. Pericytes in capillaries of cardiac muscle, exocrine pancreas, and kidney (peritubular capillary) were found to contain both desmin and vimentin. In some capillaries where pericytes do not exist, cells apposed to endothelial cells--the Ito cell in the hepatic sinusoid and the reticular cell in the splenic sinusoid--were shown to contain both of the intermediate filament proteins. In contrast, podocytes and mesangial cells around renal glomerular capillaries contained only vimentin. The presence of desmin supports the hypothesis that pericytes may have a contractile apparatus similar to that of vascular smooth muscle cells. Our results also revealed that even in microvascular beds where pericytes are not found, cells having both desmin and vimentin exist next to endothelial cells and may assume similar functions to pericytes.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The expression of two intermediate filament-associated proteins, paranemin (280,000 mol wt) and synemin (230,000 mol wt), was investigated with respect to the expression of two core intermediate filament proteins, desmin and vimentin, in various embryonic and adult chicken muscle and nonmuscle cells. All developing muscle cells, regardless of their type, simultaneously express desmin, vimentin, paranemin, and synemin. However, a difference is observed in the expression of paranemin in adult muscle. This protein is removed during differentiation of both fast and slow skeletal muscle, visceral smooth muscle, and the smooth muscle of muscular arteries, but remains in mature myocardial cells, cardiac conducting fibers, and the smooth muscle cells of elastic arteries. Some of these cells express vimentin, others desmin, and still others a mixture of the two. On the other hand, synemin is expressed in all the above types of adult muscle cells except myocardial cells. Adult myocardial cells also lack vimentin, and its presence is gradually reduced after hatching. Since in adult striated muscle all expressed intermediate filament proteins are found predominantly in association with the peripheries of myofibrillar Z discs, these results suggest that a change in the composition of skeletal and cardiac muscle Z discs occurs during chicken development and maturation. Erythrocytes that express synemin and vimentin do not express paranemin, while both embryonic and adult Schwann cells co- express paranemin and vimentin, but not synemin. Endothelial cells of muscular vessels express paranemin, while those of elastic vessels do not, and neither contains synemin. Paranemin and synemin are not expressed in neurons, epithelial, and most glial cells, suggesting that these two polypeptides are expressed only in conjunction with desmin or vimentin. These results suggest that the composition of intermediate filaments changes during chicken development, not only with respect to their core subunit proteins but also with respect to two associated polypeptides, particularly in muscle cells.  相似文献   

17.
The presence of intermediate filament proteins in vascular tissue cells has been examined by immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of the aortic wall of diverse vertebrates (rat, cow, human and chicken) and by gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from whole aortic tissue or from stripped tunica media of cow and man. Most cells of the aortic wall in these species contain vimentin filaments, including smoooth muscle cells of the tunica media. In addition, we have observed aortic cells that are positively stained by antibodies to desmin. The presence of desmin in aortic tissue has also been demonstrated by gel electrophoresis for rat, cow and chicken. In aortic tissue some smooth muscle cells contain both types of intermediate filament proteins, vimentin and desmin. Bovine aorta contains, besides cells in which vimentin and desmin seem to co-exist, distinct bundles of smooth muscle cells, located in outer regions of the tunica media, which contain only desmin. The results suggest that (i) intermediate-sized filaments of both kinds, desmin and vimentin, can occur in vascular smooth muscle in situ and (ii) smooth muscle cells of the vascular system are heterogeneous and can be distinguished by their intermediate filament proteins. The finding of different vascular smooth muscle cells is discussed in relation to development and differentiation of the vascular system.  相似文献   

18.
In vertebrate skeletal muscle, ultrastructural studies have suggested that the Z-line and extracellular intermediate filaments are linked, although a structural basis for this has remained elusive. We searched for potential novel ligands of the Z-line portion of nebulin by a yeast two-hybrid (Y2H) approach. This identified that the nebulin modules M160 to M170 interact with desmin. In desmin, deletion series experiments assigned a 19-kDa central coiled-coil domain as the nebulin-binding site. The specific interactions of nebulin and desmin were confirmed in vitro by GST pull-down experiments. In situ, the nebulin modules M176 to M181 colocalize with desmin in a Z-line-associated, striated pattern as shown by immunofluorescence studies. Our data are consistent with a model that desmin attaches directly to the Z-line through its interaction with the nebulin repeats M163-M170. This interaction may link myofibrillar Z-discs to the intermediate filament system, thereby forming a lateral linkage system which contributes to maintain adjacent Z-lines in register.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Desmin interacts with nebulin establishing a direct link between the intermediate filament network and sarcomeres at the Z-discs. Here, we examined a desmin mutation, E245D, that is located within the coil IB (nebulin-binding) region of desmin and that has been reported to cause human cardiomyopathy and skeletal muscle atrophy. We show that the coil IB region of desmin binds to C-terminal nebulin (modules 160-164) with high affinity, whereas binding of this desmin region containing the E245D mutation appears to enhance its interaction with nebulin in solid-phase binding assays. Expression of the desmin-E245D mutant in myocytes displaces endogenous desmin and C-terminal nebulin from the Z-discs with a concomitant increase in the formation of intracellular aggregates, reminiscent of a major histological hallmark of desmin-related myopathies. Actin filament architecture was strikingly perturbed in myocytes expressing the desmin-E245D mutant because most sarcomeres contained elongated or shorter actin filaments. Our findings reveal a novel role for desmin intermediate filaments in modulating actin filament lengths and organization. Collectively, these data suggest that the desmin E245D mutation interferes with the ability of nebulin to precisely regulate thin filament lengths, providing new insights into the potential molecular consequences of expression of certain disease-associated desmin mutations.  相似文献   

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