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1.
Tropomodulin (E-Tmod) is an actin filament pointed end capping protein that maintains the length of the sarcomeric actin filaments in striated muscle. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of a novel tropomodulin isoform, skeletal tropomodulin (Sk-Tmod) from chickens. Sk-Tmod is 62% identical in amino acid sequence to the previously described chicken E-Tmod and is the product of a different gene. Sk-Tmod isoform sequences are highly conserved across vertebrates and constitute an independent group in the tropomodulin family. In vitro, chicken Sk-Tmod caps actin and tropomyosin-actin filament pointed ends to the same extent as does chicken E-Tmod. However, E- and Sk-Tmods differ in their tissue distribution; Sk-Tmod predominates in fast skeletal muscle fibers, lens, and erythrocytes, while E-Tmod is found in heart and slow skeletal muscle fibers. Additionally, their expression is developmentally regulated during chicken breast muscle differentiation with Sk-Tmod replacing E-Tmod after hatching. Finally, in skeletal muscle fibers that coexpress both Sk- and E-Tmod, they are recruited to different actin filament-containing cytoskeletal structures within the cell: myofibrils and costameres, respectively. All together, these observations support the hypothesis that vertebrates have acquired different tropomodulin isoforms that play distinct roles in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
Immunofluorescence comparisons of anti-actin specificity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The abilities of antibody populations against brain actin and two immunogenic forms of cardiac actin to react with sarcomeric muscle actin and cytoplasmic non-muscle actin were tested by indirect immunofluorescence, by using isolated skeletal muscle myofibrils and cultured non-neuronal dorsal root ganglion cells as the test systems. All three antibody preparations stained the I-bands of myofibrils, a result that demonstrated the presence of antigenic determinants shared among skeletal, cardiac, and brain actins. However, although antibodies against cytoplasmic brain actin stained the stress fibers of cultured cells, those against glutaraldehyde cross-linked cardiac actin did not, a result that implies that cardiac actin possesses determinants common to sarcomeric actins but not present on cytoplasmic actin. Finally, antibodies against SDS-treated cardiac actin readily stained the stress fibers of cultured cells, in contrast to those against glutaraldehyde cross-linked cardiac actin, a result that suggests that the state of the original immunogen can affect the actin type specificity of the resulting antibody population.  相似文献   

3.
Mutations in human survival motor neurons 1 (SMN1) cause spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and are associated with defects in assembly of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) in vitro. However, the etiological link between snRNPs and SMA is unclear. We have developed a Drosophila melanogaster system to model SMA in vivo. Larval-lethal Smn-null mutations show no detectable snRNP reduction, making it unlikely that these animals die from global snRNP deprivation. Hypomorphic mutations in Smn reduce dSMN protein levels in the adult thorax, causing flightlessness and acute muscular atrophy. Mutant flight muscle motoneurons display pronounced axon routing and arborization defects. Moreover, Smn mutant myofibers fail to form thin filaments and phenocopy null mutations in Act88F, which is the flight muscle-specific actin isoform. In wild-type muscles, dSMN colocalizes with sarcomeric actin and forms a complex with alpha-actinin, the thin filament crosslinker. The sarcomeric localization of Smn is conserved in mouse myofibrils. These observations suggest a muscle-specific function for SMN and underline the importance of this tissue in modulating SMA severity.  相似文献   

4.
Myofibrillar proteins, like all other intracellular proteins, are in a dynamic state of continual degradation and resynthesis. The proteolytic system responsible for degrading myofibrillar proteins in skeletal muscle is not well defined. A proteolytic activity associated to myofibrils was found in mouse skeletal muscle, as show electrophoretic patterns, and denominated by us, as protease M. During incubation of whole myofibrils at 37 degrees C, myosin heavy chain, alpha actinin, actin and troponin T suffered degradation. These effects were inhibited selectively by serine protease inhibitors (soybean trypsin inhibitor, di-isopropyl phosphofluoridate, phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride). Using myofibrils as protease M source, azocaseinolytic activity was also detected. Endogenous inhibitor and various compounds effects on protease M activity were also quantified by trichloroacetic acid soluble products formation, using radiolabeled myofibrils. An endogenous trypsin inhibitor isolated from the muscle cytoplasmic fraction could inhibit protease M activity on myofibrillar proteins and on azocasein. While K(+) increased protease M activity, the presence of Ca(2+) did not show any effect. Data presented in this study suggest that reported protease M may be implicated in myofibrillar degradation in vivo and isolated endogenous inhibitor may provide a mechanism to control its action in mouse skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of titin during myofibrillogenesis was examined using rat skeletal muscle myogenic cultures and fluorescent-antibody staining. Efforts were made to compare the distribution and temporal sequence of incorporation of titin relative to that of the alpha- and gamma-isoforms of actin. The present observations suggested the following sequence of titin assembly: (1) newly synthesized titin molecules are distributed in a diffuse pattern throughout the sarcoplasm, (2) the titin molecules gradually associate with alpha- and gamma-actin-positive stress fiber-like structures (SFLS), (3) groups of titin molecules begin to segregate on the SFLS, and (4) titin molecules align in a mature doublet configuration in the sarcomeres of nascent myofibrils. Titin assembly on the SFLS often appeared prior to the onset of either alpha- or gamma-actin periodicity on nascent myofibrils; the latter result suggested a role for titin in sarcomeric organization. Actin distribution on SFLS and its periodicity on nascent myofibrils was usually identical between the alpha- and gamma-isoforms. This suggested that gamma-actin participated in myofibrillogenesis in a manner indistinguishable from that of alpha-actin. The transition seen from continuous actin staining of SFLS to the I-band staining pattern of mature myofibrils is discussed in relation to the corresponding reorganization of actin filaments and the molecular associations that this would entail.  相似文献   

6.
The two major proteins in the I-bands of skeletal muscle, actin and tropomyosin, were each labeled with fluorescent dyes and microinjected into cultured cardiac myocytes and skeletal muscle myotubes. Actin was incorporated along the entire length of the I-band in both types of muscle cells. In the myotubes, the incorporation was uniform, whereas in cardiac myocytes twice as much actin was incorporated in the Z-bands as in any other area of the I-band. Labeled tropomyosin that had been prepared from skeletal or smooth muscle was incorporated in a doublet in the I-band with an absence of incorporation in the Z-band. Tropomyosin prepared from brain was incorporated in a similar pattern in the I-bands of cardiac myocytes but was not incorporated in myotubes. These results in living muscle cells contrast with the patterns obtained when labeled actin and tropomyosin are added to isolated myofibrils. Labeled tropomyosins do not bind to any region of the isolated myofibrils, and labeled actin binds to A-bands. Thus, only living skeletal and cardiac muscle cells incorporate exogenous actin and tropomyosin in patterns expected from their known myofibrillar localization. These experiments demonstrate that in contrast to the isolated myofibrils, myofibrils in living cells are dynamic structures that are able to exchange actin and tropomyosin molecules for corresponding labeled molecules. The known overlap of actin filaments in cardiac Z-bands but not in skeletal muscle Z-bands accounts for the different patterns of actin incorporation in these cells. The ability of cardiac myocytes and non-muscle cells but not skeletal myotubes to incorporate brain tropomyosin may reflect differences in the relative actin-binding affinities of non-muscle tropomyosin and the respective native tropomyosins. The implications of these results for myofibrillogenesis are presented.  相似文献   

7.
Injury to muscle tissue plays a central role in various cardiovascular pathologies. Overexpression of the small heat shock protein Hsp27 protects muscle cells against thermal, oxidative and ischemic stress. However, underlying mechanisms of this protection have not been resolved. A distinctive feature of muscle cells is the stress-induced association of Hsp27 with the sarcomere. The association of Hsp27 with the cytoskeleton, in both muscle and non-muscle cells, is thought to represent interaction with Z-line components or filamentous actin. Here, we examined the association of Hsp27 with myofibrils in adult zebrafish myocardium subjected to hyperthermia and mechanical stretching. Consistent with previously published results, Hsp27 in resting length myofibrils localized to narrowly defined regions, or bands, which colocalized with Z-line markers. However, analysis of stretched myofibrils revealed that the association of Hsp27 with myofibrils was independent of desmin, alpha-actinin, myosin, and filamentous actin. Instead, Hsp27 maintained a consistent relationship with a marker for the titin A/I border over various sarcomeric lengths. Finally, extraction of actin filaments revealed that Hsp27 binds to a component of the remaining sarcomere. Together, these novel data support a mechanism of Hsp27 function where interactions with the titin filament system protect myofibrils from stress-induced degradation.  相似文献   

8.
The ability of porcine smooth muscle gelsolin to sever actin filaments was used to study alterations in the organization of F-actin containing structures during skeletal myogenesis. In permeabilized fibroblasts and unfused myoblasts, gelsolin induced complete degradation of the actin cytoskeleton. After fusion of myoblasts to multinucleated myotubes, gelsolin removed a substantial amount of actin, revealing fibers with a sarcomere-like arrangement of gelsolin-insensitive actin. These fibrils were much thinner and had shorter sarcomeres than fully differentiated myofibrils. The proportion of gelsolin-resistant fibrils increased during differentiation, resulting in almost complete inertness of mature myofibrils. Fibrils isolated from adult muscle were also found nearly resistant to gelsolin. Extraction of tropomyosin and myosin in buffer of high ionic strength prior to gelsolin treatment reestablished the susceptibility to the severing protein, both in myotubes and isolated myofibrils. Only small remnants of phalloidin-stainable material were retained. We therefore conclude that during myotube differentiation either an increased interaction of actin with actin-binding proteins (e.g., myosin and tropomyosin), or the assembly of muscle-specific isoforms of these proteins protect the filaments against degradation by actin severing proteins.  相似文献   

9.
Krp1, also called sarcosin, is a cardiac and skeletal muscle kelch repeat protein hypothesized to promote the assembly of myofibrils, the contractile organelles of striated muscles, through interaction with N-RAP and actin. To elucidate its role, endogenous Krp1 was studied in primary embryonic mouse cardiomyocytes. While immunofluorescence showed punctate Krp1 distribution throughout the cell, detergent extraction revealed a significant pool of Krp1 associated with cytoskeletal elements. Reduction of Krp1 expression with siRNA resulted in specific inhibition of myofibril accumulation with no effect on cell spreading. Immunostaining analysis and electron microscopy revealed that cardiomyocytes lacking Krp1 contained sarcomeric proteins with longitudinal periodicities similar to mature myofibrils, but fibrils remained thin and separated. These thin myofibrils were degraded by a scission mechanism distinct from the myofibril disassembly pathway observed during cell division in the developing heart. The data are consistent with a model in which Krp1 promotes lateral fusion of adjacent thin fibrils into mature, wide myofibrils and contribute insight into mechanisms of myofibrillogenesis and disassembly.  相似文献   

10.
Obscurin regulates the organization of myosin into A bands   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Obscurin is a giant sarcomeric protein composed of adhesion modules and signaling domains. It surrounds myofibrils at the level of the Z disk and the M line. To study the role of obscurin during myofibrillogenesis, we used adenovirus-mediated gene delivery to overexpress part of its COOH terminus in primary cultures of postnatal day 1 (P1) skeletal myotubes. Examination of the subcellular distribution of a number of sarcomeric proteins revealed that the organization of myosin into A bands was dramatically reduced. Myosin assembled into A bands normally in mock- or control-infected P1 myotubes. Overexpression of the COOH terminus of obscurin did not affect the organization of other sarcomeric markers, including actin, -actinin, titin, and myomesin. Assembly of myomesin into nascent M lines in treated myotubes suggests that these structures can form independently of A bands. Immunoblot analysis indicated that there was a small (20%) but consistent decrease in the amount of myosin expressed in cells infected with the COOH terminus of obscurin. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments in which we used adult skeletal muscle homogenates demonstrated that obscurin exists in a complex with myosin. Thus our findings suggest that the COOH-terminal region of obscurin interacts with sarcomeric myosin and may play a critical role in its ability to assemble into A bands in striated muscle. titin; myofibrillogenesis; sarcomere; M line; muscle  相似文献   

11.
The Z-line is a multifunctional macromolecular complex that anchors sarcomeric actin filaments, mediates interactions with intermediate filaments and costameres, and recruits signaling molecules. Antiparallel alpha-actinin homodimers, present at Z-lines, cross-link overlapping actin filaments and also bind other cytoskeletal and signaling elements. Two LIM domain containing proteins, alpha-actinin associated LIM protein (ALP) and muscle LIM protein (MLP), interact with alpha-actinin, distribute in vivo to Z-lines or costameres, respectively, and, when absent, are associated with heart disease. Here we describe the behavior of ALP and MLP during myofibrillogenesis in cultured embryonic chick cardiomyocytes. As myofibrils develop, ALP and MLP are observed in distinct distribution patterns in the cell. ALP is coincident with alpha-actinin from the first stage of myofibrillogenesis and co-distributes with alpha-actinin to Z-lines and intercalated discs in mature myofibrils. Interestingly, we also demonstrate using ALP-GFP transfection experiments and an in vitro binding assay that the ALP-alpha-actinin binding interaction is not required to target ALP to the Z-line. In contrast, MLP localization is not co-incident with that of alpha-actinin until late stages of myofibrillogenesis; however, it is present in premyofibrils and nascent myofibrils prior to the incorporation of other costameric components such as vinculin, vimentin, or desmin. Our observations support the view that ALP function is required specifically at actin anchorage sites. The subcellular distribution pattern of MLP during myofibrillogenesis suggests that it functions during differentiation prior to the establishment of costameres.  相似文献   

12.
alpha-smooth muscle actin (SMA) is typically not present in post-embryonic skeletal muscle myoblasts or skeletal muscle fibers. However, both primary myoblasts isolated from neonatal mouse muscle tissue, and C2C12, an established myoblast cell line, produced SMA in culture within hours of exposure to differentiation medium. The SMA appeared during the cells' initial elongation, persisted through differentiation and fusion into myotubes, remained abundant in early myotubes, and was occasionally observed in a striated pattern. SMA continued to be present during the initial appearance of sarcomeric actin, but disappeared shortly thereafter leaving only sarcomeric actin in contractile myotubes derived from primary myoblasts. Within one day after implantation of primary myoblasts into mouse skeletal muscle, SMA was observed in the myoblasts; but by 9 days post-implantation, no SMA was detectable in myoblasts or muscle fibers. Thus, both neonatal primary myoblasts and an established myoblast cell line appear to similarly reprise an embryonic developmental program during differentiation in culture as well as differentiation within adult mouse muscles.  相似文献   

13.
The fine structure of the myotendinous junction of the skeletal muscle of lathyritic rats caused by β-aminopropionitrile was investigated. In the junction there are finger-like processes of muscle fibers, in which thin filaments were extended from the last Z lines of myofibrils and attached to the sarcolemma of the processes. By the heavy meromyosin decoration technique, these thin filaments were identified as actin filaments. In the lathyritic muscle, the thin filaments were markedly fewer in number and distributed sparsely in the sarcoplasm.The content of connectin, an elastic protein, which is localized in myofibrils and also in sarcolemma was significantly decreased in the lathyritic muscle. A possible relationship between the changes in the fine structure of the myotendinous junction and in the connectin contents is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Prosomes (20S proteasomes) constitute the catalytic core of the 26S proteasomes, but were first observed as factors associated with unstranslated mRNA. Recently, their RNase activity was discovered together with the fact that their proteolytic function is dispensable in adapted human cells. By indirect immunofluorescence using monoclonal antibodies, we demonstrate as a general phenomenon, regular intercalation of specific types of prosomes into the sarcomeric structure of all types of striated muscle. Surprisingly, in cultured smooth muscle cells without sarcomeric organization, some prosomes also form regular striations in extended projections of cytoplasmic regions. The significance of their sarcomeric distribution is not understood as yet, but the pattern we observe is very similar to that shown by others for muscle-specific mRNAs, identified by in situ hybridization, and that of the cognate proteins. A role of prosomes in the cotranslational assembly of the myofibrillar proteins is suggested, since prosomes organize into pseudo-sarcomeric patterns prior to formation de novo of the actin-myosin arrangement.  相似文献   

15.
Contractile function of striated muscle cells depends crucially on the almost crystalline order of actin and myosin filaments in myofibrils, but the physical mechanisms that lead to myofibril assembly remains ill-defined. Passive diffusive sorting of actin filaments into sarcomeric order is kinetically impossible, suggesting a pivotal role of active processes in sarcomeric pattern formation. Using a one-dimensional computational model of an initially unstriated actin bundle, we show that actin filament treadmilling in the presence of processive plus-end crosslinking provides a simple and robust mechanism for the polarity sorting of actin filaments as well as for the correct localization of myosin filaments. We propose that the coalescence of crosslinked actin clusters could be key for sarcomeric pattern formation. In our simulations, sarcomere spacing is set by filament length prompting tight length control already at early stages of pattern formation. The proposed mechanism could be generic and apply both to premyofibrils and nascent myofibrils in developing muscle cells as well as possibly to striated stress-fibers in non-muscle cells.  相似文献   

16.
Several biologically important protein structures give rise to strong second-harmonic generation (SHG) in their native context. In addition to high-contrast optical sections of cells and tissues, SHG imaging can provide detailed structural information based on the physical constraints of the optical effect. In this study we characterize, by biochemical and optical analysis, the critical structures underlying SHG from the complex muscle sarcomere. SHG emission arises from domains of the sarcomere containing thick filaments, even within nascent sarcomeres of differentiating myocytes. SHG from isolated myofibrils is abolished by extraction of myosin, but is unaffected by removal or addition of actin filaments. Furthermore, the polarization dependence of sarcomeric SHG is not affected by either the proportion of myosin head domains or the orientation of myosin heads. By fitting SHG polarization anisotropy readings to theoretical response curves, we find an orientation for the elemental harmonophore that corresponds well to the pitch of the myosin rod alpha-helix along the thick filament axis. Taken together, these data indicate that myosin rod domains are the key structures giving SHG from striated muscle. This study should guide the interpretation of SHG contrast in images of cardiac and skeletal muscle tissue for a variety of biomedical applications.  相似文献   

17.
18.
In vertebrate skeletal muscle, the proliferating myoblasts synthesize nonmuscle isoforms of actin, and the cells begin to express muscle-specific actin isoforms during their myogenic differentiation. To study the distributions of the actin isoforms in myogenic cells and fully differentiated skeletal muscle, we prepared a peptide antibody specific for the skeletal alpha isoform of actin and used this antibody along with an antibody specifically reactive with nonmuscle gamma actin to stain cultured myotubes and adult skeletal myofibrils by double-indirect immunofluorescence. At this level of resolution, no differences in isoform localization were seen: Both muscle and nonmuscle actins were detected in the myotubes and in the striations of mature myofibrils. Myotubes were also double-stained using immunogold electron microscopy, and the isoform distributions were determined quantitatively by counting the two sizes of gold particles that corresponded to labeling with each antibody. A quantitative analysis of immunoreactivity revealed that, although both forms were present in all actin-containing structures, nonmuscle actin was relatively more prevalent along the edges (cortical microfilaments) of the myotubes, whereas the muscle isoform predominated in the interior regions (containing forming myofibrils). Thus, we have found evidence of a heterogeneous distribution of muscle and nonmuscle actin isoforms in differentiating myogenic cells, and we have demonstrated that a nonmuscle actin isoform is a component of the muscle contractile apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
Existing models describing sarcomere assembly have arisen primarily from studies using cardiac muscle. In contrast to cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle differentiation is characterised by dramatic changes in protein expression, from non-muscle to muscle-specific isoforms before organisation of the sarcomeres. Consequently, little is understood of the potential influence of non-muscle cytoskeletal proteins on skeletal sarcomere assembly. To address this issue, transfectant (gamma33-B1) and control mouse C2 myoblasts were differentiated to form myotubes, and various stages of skeletal sarcomere assembly were studied. Organisation of non-muscle gamma-actin and co-localisation with sarcomeric alpha-actinin, an early marker of sarcomere assembly and a major component of Z lines, was noted. gamma-Actin was also identified in young myotubes with developing sarcomeric myofibrils in regenerating adult mouse muscle. Localisation of gamma-actin in a different area of the myotube to the muscle-specific sarcomeric alpha-actin also indicated a distinct role for gamma-actin. The effects of aberrant gamma-actin expression in other myoblast lines, further suggested a sequestering role for gamma-actin. These observations make the novel suggestion that non-muscle gamma-actin plays a role in skeletal sarcomere assembly both in vitro and in vivo. Consequently, a modified model is proposed which describes the role of gamma-actin in skeletal sarcomere assembly.  相似文献   

20.
The rotational motion of crossbridges, formed when myosin heads bind to actin, is an essential element of most molecular models of muscle contraction. To obtain direct information about this molecular motion, we have performed saturation transfer EPR experiments in which spin labels were selectively and rigidly attached to myosin heads in purified myosin and in glycerinated myofibrils. In synthetic myosin filaments, in the absence of actin, the spectra indicated rapid rotational motion of heads characterized by an effective correlation time of 10 microseconds. By contrast, little or no submillisecond rotational motion was observed when isolated myosin heads (subfragment-1) were attached to glass beads or to F-actin, indicating that the bond between the myosin head and actin is quite rigid on this time scale. A similar immobilization of heads was observed in spin-labeled myofibrils in rigor. Therefore, we conclude that virtually all of the myosin heads in a rigor myofibril are immobilized, apparently owing to attachment of heads to actin. Addition of ATP to myofibrils, either in the presence or absence of 0.1 mM Ca2+, produced spectra similar to those observed for myosin filaments in the absence of actin, indicating rapid submillisecond rotational motion. These results indicate that either (a) most of the myosin heads are detached at any instant in relaxed or activated myofibrils or (b) attached heads bearing the products of ATP hydrolysis rotate as rapidly as detached heads.  相似文献   

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