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1.
Fast and slow/cardiac troponin C (TnC) are the two different isoforms of TnC. Expression of these isoforms is developmentally regulated in vertebrate skeletal muscle. Therefore, in our studies, the pattern of their expression was analyzed by determining the steady-state levels of both TnC mRNAs. It was also examined if mRNAs for both isoforms of TnC were efficiently translated during chicken skeletal muscle development. We have used different methods to determine the steady-state levels of TnC mRNAs. First, probes specific for the fast and slow TnC mRNAs were developed using a 390 base pair (bp) and a 255 bp long fragment, of the full-length chicken fast and slow TnC cDNA clones, respectively. Our analyses using RNA-blot technique showed that fast TnC mRNA was the predominant isoform in embryonic chicken skeletal muscle. Following hatching, a significant amount of slow TnC mRNA began to accumulate in the skeletal (pectoralis) muscle. At 43 weeks posthatching, the slow TnC mRNA was nearly as abundant as the fast isoform. Furthermore, a majority of both slow and fast TnC mRNAs was found to be translationally active. A second method allowed a more reliable measure of the relative abundance of slow and fast TnC mRNAs in chicken skeletal muscle. We used a common highly conserved 18-nucleotide-long sequence towards the 5'-end of these mRNAs to perform primer extension analysis of both mRNAs in a single reaction. The result of these analyses confirmed the predominance of fast TnC mRNA in the embryonic skeletal muscle, while significant accumulation of slow TnC mRNA was observed in chicken breast (pectoralis) muscle following hatching. In addition to primer extension analysis, polymerase chain reaction was used to amplify the fast and slow TnC mRNAs from cardiac and skeletal muscle. Analysis of the amplified products demonstrated the presence of significant amounts of slow TnC mRNA in the adult skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

2.
The 20-kDa regulatory myosin light chain (MLC), also known as MLC-2, plays an important role in the regulation of both smooth muscle and nonmuscle cell contractile activity. Phosphorylation of MLC-2 by the enzyme MLC kinase increases the actin-activated myosin ATPase activity and thereby regulates the contractile activity. We have isolated and characterized an MLC-2 cDNA corresponding to the human vascular smooth muscle MLC-2 isoform from a cDNA library derived from umbilical artery RNA. The translation of the in vitro synthesized mRNA, corresponding to the cDNA insert, in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate results in the synthesis of a 20,000-dalton protein that is immunoreactive with antibodies raised against purified chicken gizzard MLC-2. The derived amino acid sequence of the putative human smooth muscle MLC-2 shows only three amino acid differences when compared to chicken gizzard MLC-2. However, comparison with the human cardiac isoform reveals only 48% homology. Blot hybridizations and S1 nuclease analysis indicate that the human smooth muscle MLC-2 isoform is expressed restrictively in smooth muscle tissues such as colon and uterus and in some, but not all, nonmuscle cell lines. Previously reported MLC-2 cDNA from rat aortic smooth muscle cells in culture is ubiquitously expressed in all muscle and nonmuscle cells, and it was suggested that both smooth muscle and nonmuscle MLC-2 proteins are identical and are probably encoded by the same gene. In contrast, the human smooth muscle MLC-2 cDNA that we have characterized from an intact smooth muscle tissue is not expressed in skeletal and cardiac muscles and also in a number of nonmuscle cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
The myosin 20,000-D regulatory light chain (RLC) has a central role in smooth muscle contraction. Previous work has suggested either the presence of two RLC isoforms, one specific for nonmuscle and one specific for smooth muscle, or the absence of a true smooth muscle-specific isoform, in which instance smooth muscle cells would use nonmuscle isoforms. To address this issue directly, we have isolated rat RLC cDNAs and corresponding genomic sequences of two smooth muscle RLC based on homology to the amino acid sequence of the chicken gizzard RLC. These cDNAs are highly homologous in their amino acid coding regions and contain unique 3'-untranslated regions. RNA analyses of rat tissue using these unique 3'-untranslated regions revealed that their expression is differentially regulated. However, one cDNA (RLC-B), predominantly a nonmuscle isoform, based on abundant expression in nonmuscle tissues including brain, spleen, and lung, is easily detected in smooth muscle tissues. The other cDNA (RLC-A; see Taubman, M., J. W. Grant, and B. Nadal-Ginard. 1987. J. Cell Biol. 104:1505-1513) was detected in a variety of nonmuscle, smooth muscle, and sarcomeric tissues. RNA analyses comparing expression of both RLC genes with the actin gene family and smooth muscle specific alpha-tropomyosin demonstrated that neither RLC gene was strictly smooth muscle specific. RNA analyses of cell lines demonstrated that both of the RLC genes are expressed in a variety of cell types. The complete genomic structure of RLC-A and close linkage to RLC-B is described.  相似文献   

4.
Isoproteins of myosin alkali light chain (LC) were co-expressed in cultured chicken cardiomyocytes and fibroblasts and their incorporation levels into myofibrils and stress fibers were compared among members of the LC isoform family. In order to distinguish each isoform from the other, cDNAs of LC isoforms were tagged with different epitopes. Expressed LCs were detected with antibodies to the tags and their distribution was analyzed by confocal microscopy. In cardiomyocytes, the incorporation level of LC into myofibrils was shown to increase in the order from nonmuscle isoform (LC3nm), to slow skeletal muscle isoform (LC1sa), to slow skeletal/ventricular muscle isoform (LC1sb), and to fast skeletal muscle isoforms (LC1f and LC3f). Thus, the hierarchal order of the LC affinity for the cardiac myosin heavy chain (MHC) is identical to that obtained in the rat (Komiyama et al., 1996. J. Cell Sci., 109: 2089-2099), suggesting that this order may be common for taxonomic animal classes. In fibroblasts, the affinity of LC for the nonmuscle MHC in stress fibers was found to increase in the order from LC3nm, to LC1sb, to LC1sa, and to LC1f and LC3f. This order for the nonmuscle MHC is partly different from that for the cardiac MHC. This indicates that the order of the affinity of LC isoproteins for MHC varies depending on the MHC isoform. Further, for both the cardiac and nonmuscle MHCs, the fast skeletal muscle LCs exhibited the highest affinity. This suggests that the fast skeletal muscle LCs may be evolved isoforms possessing the ability to associate tightly with a variety of MHC isoforms.  相似文献   

5.
Capping protein nucleates the assembly of actin filaments and stabilizes actin filaments by binding to their barbed ends. We describe here a novel isoform of the beta subunit of chicken capping protein, the beta 2 isoform, which arises by alternative splicing. The chicken beta 1 isoform and the beta 2 isoform are identical in their amino acid sequence except for a short region at the COOH terminus; this region of the beta subunit has been implicated in binding actin. Human and mouse cDNAs of the beta 1 and beta 2 isoforms also were isolated and among these vertebrates, the COOH-terminal region of each isoform is highly conserved. In contrast, comparison of the sequences of the vertebrate beta subunit COOH-termini to those of lower eukaryotes shows no similarities. The beta 2 isoform is the predominant isoform of nonmuscle tissues and the beta 1 isoform, which was first characterized in studies of capping protein from chicken muscle, is the predominant isoform of muscle tissues, as shown by immunoblots probed with isoform- specific antibodies and by RNAse protection analysis of mRNAs. The beta 2 isoform also is a component of dynactin complex from brain, which contains the actin-related protein Arp1. Both beta-subunit isoforms are expressed in cardiac muscle but they have non-overlapping subcellular distributions. The beta 1 isoform is at Z-discs of myofibrils, and the beta 2 isoform is enriched at intercalated discs; in cardiac myocytes grown in culture, the beta 2 isoform also is a component of cell-cell junctions and at sites where myofibrils contact the sarcolemma. The biochemical basis for the differential distribution of capping protein isoforms is likely due to interaction with specific proteins at Z-discs and cell-cell junctions, or to preferential association with different actin isoforms. Thus, vertebrates have developed isoforms of capping protein that associate with distinct actin-filament arrays.  相似文献   

6.
7.
We have isolated tropomyosin cDNAs from human skeletal muscle and nonmuscle cDNA libraries and constructed gene-specific DNA probes for each of the four functional tropomyosin genes. These DNA probes were used to define the regulation of the corresponding mRNAs during the process of myogenesis. Tropomyosin regulation was compared with that of beta- and gamma-actin. No two striated muscle-specific tropomyosin mRNAs are coordinately accumulated during myogenesis nor in adult striated muscles. Similarly, no two nonmuscle tropomyosins are coordinately repressed during myogenesis. However, mRNAs encoding the 248 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins and beta- and gamma-actin are more persistent in adult skeletal muscle than those encoding the 284 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins. In particular, the nonmuscle tropomyosin Tm4 is expressed at similar levels in adult rat nonmuscle and striated muscle tissues. We conclude that each tropomyosin mRNA has its own unique determinants of accumulation and that the 248 amino acid nonmuscle tropomyosins may have a role in the architecture of the adult myofiber. The variable regulation of nonmuscle isoforms during myogenesis suggests that the different isoforms compete for inclusion into cellular structures and that compensating autoregulation of mRNA levels bring gene expression into alignment with the competitiveness of each individual gene product. Such an isoform competition-autoregulatory compensation mechanism would readily explain the unique regulation of each gene.  相似文献   

8.
Two distinct cDNA clones for nonmuscle myosin heavy chain (MHC) were isolated from a chicken fibroblast cDNA library by cross-hydridization under a moderate stringency with chicken gizzard smooth muscle MHC cDNA. These two fibroblast MHC and the gizzard MHC are each encoded in different genes in the chicken genome. Northern blot analysis showed that both of the nonmuscle MHC mRNAs were expressed not only in fibroblasts but also in a variety of tissues including brain, lung, kidney, spleen, and skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscles. However, the relative contents of the two nonmuscle MHC mRNAs varied greatly among tissues. The encoded amino acid sequences of the nonmuscle MHCs were highly similar to each other (81% identity) and to the smooth muscle MHC (81-84%), but much less similar to vertebrate skeletal muscle MHCs (38-41%) or to protista nonmuscle MHCs (35-36%). A phylogenic tree of MHC isoforms was constructed by calculating the similarity scores between these MHC sequences. An examination of the tree showed that the vertebrate sarcomeric (skeletal and cardiac) MHC isoforms are encoded in a very closely related multigene family, and that the vertebrate non-sarcomeric (smooth muscle and nonmuscle) MHC isoforms define a distinct, less conserved MHC gene family.  相似文献   

9.
Troponin C (TnC) plays a key role in the regulation of muscle contraction, thereby modulating the Ca(2+)-activation characteristics of skinned muscle fibers. This study was performed to assess the effects of a 15-day hindlimb unloading (HU) period on TnC expression and its functional behavior in the slow postural muscles of the rat. We investigated the TnC isoform expression in whole soleus muscles and in single fibers. The latter were also checked for their Ca(2+) activation characteristics and sensitivity to bepridil, a Ca(2+) sensitizer molecule. This drug has been described as exerting a differential effect on slow and fast fibers, depending on the TnC isoform. With regard to TnC expression, three populations were found in control muscle fibers: slow, hybrid slow, and hybrid fast fibers, with the TnC fast being always coexpressed with TnC slow. In the whole muscle, TnC fast expression increased after HU because of the increase in the proportion of hybrid fast fibers. The HU hybrid fast fibers had properties similar to those of control hybrid fast fibers. The fibers that remained slow after HU exhibited similar bepridil and Sr(2+) properties as control slow fibers. Therefore, in these fibers, the changes could not be related to the TnC molecule.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated and characterized complementary DNAs (cDNAs) encoding chicken cardiac muscle tropomyosin and a low-molecular-weight nonmuscle tropomyosin. The cardiac muscle cDNA (pCHT-4) encodes a 284-amino acid protein that differs from chicken skeletal muscle alpha- and beta-tropomyosins throughout its length. The nonmuscle cDNA (pFT-C) encodes a 248-amino acid protein that is most similar (93-94%) to the tropomyosin class including rat fibroblast TM-4, equine platelet tropomyosin, and human fibroblast TM30pl. The nucleotide sequences of the cardiac and nonmuscle cDNAs are identical from the position encoding cardiac amino acid 81 (nonmuscle amino acid 45) through cardiac amino acid 257 (nonmuscle amino acid 221). The sequences differ both 5' and 3' of this region of identity. These comparisons suggest that the chicken cardiac tropomyosin and low-molecular-weight "platelet-like" tropomyosin are derived from the same genomic locus by alternative splicing. S1 analysis suggests that this locus encodes at least one other tropomyosin isoform.  相似文献   

11.
Fast skeletal and cardiac troponin C (TnC) contain two high affinity Ca2+/Mg2+ binding sites within the C-terminal domain that are thought to be important for association of TnC with the troponin complex of the thin filament. To test directly the function of these high affinity sites in cardiac TnC they were systematically altered by mutagenesis to generate proteins with a single inactive site III or IV (CBM-III and CBM-IV, respectively), or with both sites III and IV inactive (CBM-III-IV). Equilibrium dialysis indicated that the mutated sites did not bind Ca2+ at pCa 4. Both CBM-III and CBM-IV were similar to the wild type protein in their ability to regulate Ca(2+)-dependent contraction in slow skeletal muscle fibers, and Ca(2+)-dependent ATPase activity in fast skeletal and cardiac muscle myofibrils. The mutant CBM-III-IV is capable of regulating contraction in permeabilized slow muscle fibers but only if the fibers are maintained in a contraction solution containing a high concentration of the mutant protein. CBM-III-IV also regulates myofibril ATPase activity in fast skeletal and cardiac myofibrils but only at concentrations 10-100-fold greater than the normal protein. The pCa50 and Hill coefficient values for Ca(2+)-dependent activation of fast skeletal muscle myofibril ATPase activity by the normal protein and all three mutants are essentially the same. Competition between active and inactive forms of cardiac and slow TnC in a functional assay demonstrates that mutation of both sites III and IV greatly reduces the affinity of cardiac and slow TnC for its functionally relevant binding site in the myofibrils. The data indicate that although neither high affinity site is absolutely essential for regulation of muscle contraction in vitro, at least one active C-terminal site is required for tight association of cardiac troponin C with myofibrils. This requirement can be satisfied by either site III or IV.  相似文献   

12.
We have characterized the structure and expression of rodent mRNAs encoding the fast and slow skeletal muscle isoforms of the contractile regulatory protein, troponin I (TnIfast and TnIslow). TnIfast and TnIslow cDNA clones were isolated from mouse and rat muscle cDNA clone libraries and were used as isoform-specific probes in Northern blot and in situ hybridization studies. These studies showed that the TnIfast and TnIslow mRNAs are expressed in skeletal muscle, but not cardiac muscle or other tissues, and that they are differentially expressed in individual muscle fibers. Fiber typing on the basis of in situ hybridization analysis of TnI isoform mRNA content showed an excellent correlation with fiber type as assessed by myosin ATPase histochemistry. These results directly demonstrate that the differential expression of skeletal muscle TnI isoforms in the various classes of vertebrate striated muscle cells is based on gene regulatory mechanisms which control the abundances of specific TnI mRNAs in individual muscle cells. Both TnIfast and TnIslow mRNAs are expressed, at comparable levels, in differentiated cultures of rat L6 and mouse C2 muscle cell lines. Thus, although neuronal input has been shown to be an important factor in determining fast versus slow isoform-specific expression in skeletal muscle, both TnIfast and TnIslow genes can be expressed in muscle cells in the absence of nerve. Comparison of the deduced rodent TnI amino acid sequences with previously determined rabbit protein sequences showed that residues with potential fast/slow isoform-specific function are present in several discrete clusters, two of which are located near previously identified actin and troponin C binding sites.  相似文献   

13.
We characterized Bos taurus leptin receptor (Ob-R) isoform mRNAs as well as their expression in different tissues, including some adipose depots (perirenal, subcutaneous and intermuscular adipose tissues). Based on the GenBank database sequences of the bovine partial Ob-R, primers were designed to amplify cDNAs of bovine Ob-R isoforms. The full-length cDNAs of bovine the Ob-R isoforms were cloned by combination with 3'-and 5'-RACE. Three bovine Ob-R isoform cDNAs were cloned and the sequence analyses revealed that these cDNAs were bovine Ob-R isoforms, i.e., the long form (Ob-Rb), the middle form (Ob-Ra) and the short form (Ob-Rc). The open reading frames of Ob-Ra, Ob-Rb and Ob-Rc gene were 2688, 3498 and 2673 bp, respectively. The deduced amino acid sequences suggested that the isoforms were single transmembrane proteins, and differed in the C-terminal amino acid sequences. The amino acid sequence of these bovine Ob-R isoforms showed 73-75% identity compared with the corresponding mouse isoforms. The tissue-specific expression of the bovine Ob-R isoforms were measured by semi-quantitative RT-PCR. Expression of Ob-Rb was highest in liver, heart, spleen and kidney, with lower expression in lung and testis, and slight expression in muscle. Ob-Ra was highly expressed in liver and spleen, whereas moderate expression was observed in heart, testis, and muscle, and its expression was the lowest in lung and kidney. Ob-Rc mRNA was expressed in the liver, heart, testis, kidney and muscle, but not in the lung and spleen. In adipose tissues, higher expression of Ob-Ra and Ob-Rb mRNA was observed in intermuscular adipose tissue than in subcutaneous or perirenal adipose tissues. Ob-Ra mRNA level was positively correlated with Ob-Rb mRNA level in the adipose tissues (r=0.81, P<0.05). The results demonstrated that each Ob-R isoform mRNA was differentially expressed in various tissues of cattle, which may be involved in the difference of peripheral actions for leptin.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Calsequestrin (CAL) is a calcium-binding protein whose primary function is thought to involve sequestration of calcium in the muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Little is known about the mechanisms regulating CAL expression, or about the role of this protein in muscle development. In addition, CAL may regulate calcium localization in some nonmuscle cells. We have identified an avian calsequestrin homolog. The predicted amino acid sequence of the avian CAL, first described as a laminin binding protein, and named aspartactin, is 70-80% identical to mammalian CAL sequences. We have used affinity-purified antibodies and cDNA probes to investigate expression in developing and adult chicken tissues. In adult chickens, the avian CAL homolog was expressed in slow and fast twitch skeletal muscle as well as in cardiac muscle. Surprisingly high levels of CAL protein were also detected in cerebellum. During development, CAL mRNA and protein were detected in Embryonic Day 5 (E-5) limb primordia, well before the initiation of myoblast fusion. In leg skeletal muscle, CAL protein and mRNA increase approximately 10-fold from E-8 to E-18 with a time course that just precedes myoblast fusion. This early expression pattern was also observed in cultured chicken pectoral myoblasts, and appears to be regulated at the level of mRNA abundance. The developmental profile of CAL expression is compared to that of other muscle proteins and possible additional functions of CAL are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Fast-twitch extensor digitorum longus muscles of the rabbit were subjected to chronic low-frequency stimulation during different time periods. Changes in the relative amounts of mRNAs encoding fast and slow/cardiac Ca2+-ATPase isoforms were assessed through the use of an RNase-protection assay. Stimulation-induced increases in slow cardiac Ca2+-ATPase and phospholamban mRNAs were quantified by mRNA hybridization. Prolonged stimulation resulted in an exchange of the fast with the slow/cardiac Ca2+-ATPase isoform mRNAs. The exchange was complete after 72 d of stimulation as compared with normal slow-twitch soleus muscle. The tissue content of phospholamban mRNA reached levels similar to that found in normal slow-twitch soleus muscle by the same time. The conversion of the sarcoplasmic reticulum coincided with the fast-to-slow troponin C isoform transition, previously investigated in the same muscles.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Teleost fish store lipids among several tissues primarily as triacylglycerol (TG). Upon metabolic demand, stored TGs are hydrolyzed by hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL). In this study, two distinct cDNAs encoding HSL were isolated, cloned, and sequenced from adipose tissue of rainbow trout. The full-length cDNAs, designated HSL1 and HSL2, were 2562-bp and 2887-bp in length, respectively, and share 82% nucleotide identity. Phylogentic analysis suggests that the two HSLs derive from paralogous genes that may have arisen during a teleost-specific genome duplication event. Quantitative real-time PCR revealed that HSL1 and HSL2 were differentially expressed, both in terms of distribution among tissues as well as in terms of abundance within selected tissues of juvenile trout. HSL1 and HSL2 mRNAs were detected in the brain, spleen, pancreas, kidney, gill, intestine, heart, and white muscle, but were most abundant in the red muscle, liver, and adipose tissue. HSL1 mRNA was more abundant than HSL2 mRNA in the adipose tissue, whereas HSL2 mRNA was more abundant than HSL1 mRNA in the liver. Short term fasting (4 weeks) increased HSL1 and HSL2 mRNA expression in the adipose tissue, but only HSL1 mRNA levels increased in the liver and the red muscle. During a prolonged fast (6 weeks), there was continued elevation of HSL1 and HSL2 mRNA levels in the liver and muscle; HSL mRNA expression in mesenteric fat declined, coincident with depletion of mesenteric fat mass. Refeeding fish reduced HSL expression to levels seen in continuously fed fish. These findings indicate that the pattern of HSL expression is consistent with the diverse lipid storage pattern of fish and suggest that distinct mechanisms serve to regulate differential expression of the two HSLs in tissues and during a progressive fast.  相似文献   

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