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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(5):1159-1167
The sarcolemma of the smooth muscle cell displays two alternating structural domains in the electron microscope: densely-staining plaques that correspond to the adherens junctions and intervening uncoated regions which are rich in membrane invaginations, or caveolae. The adherens junctions serve as membrane anchorage sites for the actin cytoskeleton and are typically marked by antibodies to vinculin. We show here by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy that dystrophin is specifically localized in the caveolae-rich domains of the smooth muscle sarcolemma, together with the caveolae-associated molecule caveolin. Additional labeling experiments revealed that beta 1 integrin and fibronectin are confined to the adherens junctions, as indicated by their codistribution with vinculin and tensin. Laminin, on the other hand, is distributed around the entire cell perimeter. The sarcolemma of the smooth muscle cell is thus divided into two distinct domains, featuring different and mutually exclusive components. This simple bipartite domain organization contrasts with the more complex organization of the skeletal muscle sarcolemma: smooth muscle thus offers itself as a useful system for localizing, among other components, potential interacting partners of dystrophin.  相似文献   

2.
We use a highly specific and sensitive antibody to further characterize the distribution of dystrophin in skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle. No evidence for localization other than at the cell surface is apparent in skeletal muscle and no 427-kD dystrophin labeling was detected in sciatic nerve. An elevated concentration of dystrophin appears at the myotendinous junction and the neuromuscular junction, labeling in the latter being more intense specifically in the troughs of the synaptic folds. In cardiac muscle the distribution of dystrophin is limited to the surface plasma membrane but is notably absent from the membrane that overlays adherens junctions of the intercalated disks. In smooth muscle, the plasma membrane labeling is considerably less abundant than in cardiac or skeletal muscle and is found in areas of membrane underlain by membranous vesicles. As in cardiac muscle, smooth muscle dystrophin seems to be excluded from membrane above densities that mark adherens junctions. Dystrophin appears as a doublet on Western blots of skeletal and cardiac muscle, and as a single band of lower abundance in smooth muscle that corresponds most closely in molecular weight to the upper band of the striated muscle doublet. The lower band of the doublet in striated muscle appears to lack a portion of the carboxyl terminus and may represent a dystrophin isoform. Isoform differences and the presence of dystrophin on different specialized membrane surfaces imply multiple functional roles for the dystrophin protein.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, the presence and cellular distribution of dystrophin family products (i.e. Dp71d, Dp71f-like protein and dystrobrevin) was examined by indirect immunofluorescence and Western blotting in guinea pig spermatozoa. Two dystrophin-associated proteins, beta-dystroglycan and alpha-syntrophin, and nNOS a protein frequently associated with alpha-syntrophin, were determined. In spermatozoa lacking plasma membrane and acrosome, Dp71f-like protein was found in the postacrosomal perinuclear theca and also in the middle piece of the flagellum. In the flagellum, Dp71f-like protein is localized together with alpha-syntrophin and nNOS. Dp71d was present in the plasma membrane of the middle piece with beta-dystroglycan, alpha-syntrophin and nNOS. Dp71d was also present in plasma membrane of the post acrosomal region, but only with nNOS. Finally, dystrobrevin was located all along skeletal flagellum structures and in the subacrosomal hemisphere of the perinuclear theca. This distinct and complementary distribution in various domains of spermatozoa may reveal a specific function for each short dystrophin family product, in the stabilization of the domains where they are located.  相似文献   

4.
Dystrophin is a high molecular weight protein present at low abundance in skeletal, cardiac and smooth muscle and in trace amounts in brain. In skeletal muscle, dystrophin is uniformly distributed along the inner surface of the plasma membrane. Biochemical fractionation studies have shown that all detectable skeletal muscle dystrophin is tightly associated with a complex of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-binding and concanavalin A (Con A) binding sarcolemmal glycoproteins. Absence of dystrophin is the primary biochemical defect in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and leads to segmental necrosis of their skeletal myofibers. Although present in similar amounts in normal cardiac and skeletal muscle, the absence of dystrophin from cardiac muscle has less severe effects on the survival of cardiac cells. We have therefore examined whether there are differences in the properties of cardiac and skeletal dystrophin. We report that in contrast to skeletal muscle, cardiac dystrophin is distributed between distinct pools: a soluble cytoplasmic pool, a membrane-bound pool not associated with WGA-binding glycoproteins and a membrane-bound pool associated with WGA-binding glycoproteins. Cardiac dystrophin was not associated with any Con A binding glycoproteins. Immunohistochemical localization studies in isolated ventricular myocytes reveal a distinct punctate staining pattern for dystrophin, approximating to the level of the transverse tubule/Z-line and contrasting with the uniform sarcolemmal staining reported for skeletal muscle fibers. The distinct properties of cardiac dystrophin suggest unique roles for this protein in cardiac versus skeletal muscle function.Abbreviations Dys Dystrophin - T-tubule Transverse tubule - SDS-PAGE Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate-Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis - WGA Wheat Germ Agglutinin - Con A Concanavalin A - DHP Dihydropyridine receptor - FITC Fluorescein Isothiocyanate Conjugate - NAG N-Acetyl-D-Glucosamine - NP-40 NONIDET P-40 - PBS Phosphate-Buffered Saline - TBST Tris Buffered Saline-Tween  相似文献   

5.
Dystrophin and beta-dystroglycan are components of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex (DGC), a multimolecular assembly that spans the cell membrane and links the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular basal lamina. Defects in the dystrophin gene are the cause of Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies. The C-terminal region of dystrophin binds the cytoplasmic tail of beta-dystroglycan, in part through the interaction of its WW domain with a proline-rich motif in the tail of beta-dystroglycan. Here we report the crystal structure of this portion of dystrophin in complex with the proline-rich binding site in beta-dystroglycan. The structure shows that the dystrophin WW domain is embedded in an adjacent helical region that contains two EF-hand-like domains. The beta-dystroglycan peptide binds a composite surface formed by the WW domain and one of these EF-hands. Additionally, the structure reveals striking similarities in the mechanisms of proline recognition employed by WW domains and SH3 domains.  相似文献   

6.
An improved immunogold labeling procedure was used to examine the subcellular distribution of glucose transporters in Lowricryl HM20- embedded skeletal muscle from transgenic mice overexpressing either Glut1 or Glut4. In basal muscle, Glut4 was highly enriched in membranes of the transverse tubules and the terminal cisternae of the triadic junctions. Less than 10% of total muscle Glut4 was present in the vicinity of the sarcolemmal membrane. Insulin treatment increased the number of gold particles associated with the transverse tubules and the sarcolemma by three-fold. However, insulin also increased the total Glut4 immunogold reactivity in muscle ultrathin sections by up to 1.8- fold and dramatically increased the amount of Glut4 in muscle sections as observed by laser confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. The average diameter of transverse tubules observed in longitudinal sections increased by 50% after insulin treatment. Glut1 was highly enriched in the sarcolemma, both in the basal state and after insulin treatment. Disruption of transverse tubule morphology by in vitro glycerol shock completely abolished insulin-stimulated glucose transport in isolated rat epitrochlearis muscles. These data indicate that: (a) Glut1 and Glut4 are targeted to distinct plasma membrane domains in skeletal muscle; (b) Glut1 contributes to basal transport at the sarcolemma and the bulk of insulin-stimulated transport is mediated by Glut4 localized in the transverse tubules; (c) insulin increases the apparent surface area of transverse tubules in skeletal muscle; and (d) insulin causes the unmasking of a COOH-terminal antigenic epitope in skeletal muscle in much the same fashion as it does in rat adipocytes.  相似文献   

7.
Rapsyn, a peripheral membrane protein of skeletal muscle, is necessary for the formation of the highly organized structure of the vertebrate neuromuscular junction. For mice lacking rapsyn, there is a failure of postsynaptic specialization characterized by an absence of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and other integral and peripheral membrane proteins such as beta-dystroglycan and utrophin. Dystroglycan is necessary for the formation of the mature neuromuscular junction and has been shown to interact directly with rapsyn. Previous studies with rapsyn fragments and mutants, expressed in 293T cells along with nAChRs, establish that the rapsyn tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) domain is involved in self-association and its coiled-coil domain is necessary for nAChR clustering. The function of the rapsyn RING-H2 domain, which is not necessary for rapsyn self-association or nAChR clustering, is unknown. To further characterize these domains, we have used a yeast two-hybrid assay to test for interactions at the plasma membrane between rapsyn domains and a nAChR beta-subunit fragment, the beta-dystroglycan cytoplasmic domain, or rapsyn domains. The rapsyn coiled-coil domain interacts with the nAChR beta-subunit cytoplasmic domain, but not with itself, other rapsyn domains, or beta-dystroglycan. The RING-H2 domain interacts only with the beta-dystroglycan cytoplasmic domain. Furthermore, when expressed in 293T cells, a rapsyn construct containing as few as two TPRs and the RING-H2 domain self-associates and clusters dystroglycan, but not nAChRs. These results emphasize the modular character of the rapsyn structural domains.  相似文献   

8.
Skeletal muscle dystrophin is a 427 kDa protein thought to act as a link between the actin cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. Perturbations of the dystrophin-associated complex, for example, between dystrophin and the transmembrane glycoprotein beta-dystroglycan, may lead to muscular dystrophy. Previously, the cysteine-rich region and first half of the carboxy-terminal domain of dystrophin were shown to interact with beta-dystroglycan through a stretch of fifteen amino acids at the carboxy-terminus of beta-dystroglycan. This region of dystrophin implicated in binding beta-dystroglycan contains four modular protein domains: a WW domain, two putative Ca2+-binding EF-hand motifs, and a putative zinc finger ZZ domain. The WW domain is a globular domain of 38-40 amino acids with two highly conserved tryptophan residues spaced 20-22 amino acids apart. A subset of WW domains was shown to bind ligands that contain a Pro-Pro-x-Tyr core motif (where x is any amino acid). Here we elucidate the role of the WW domain of dystrophin and surrounding sequence in binding beta-dystroglycan. We show that the WW domain of dystrophin along with the EF-hand motifs binds to the carboxy-terminus of beta-dystroglycan. Through site-specific mutagenesis and in vitro binding assays, we demonstrate that binding of dystrophin to the carboxy-terminus of beta-dystroglycan occurs via a beta-dystroglycan Pro-Pro-x-Tyr core motif. Targeted mutagenesis of conserved WW domain residues reveals that the dystrophin/beta-dystroglycan interaction occurs primarily through the WW domain of dystrophin. Precise mapping of this interaction could aid in therapeutic design.  相似文献   

9.
Caveolin-3, the most recently recognized member of the caveolin gene family, is muscle-specific and is found in both cardiac and skeletal muscle, as well as smooth muscle cells. Several independent lines of evidence indicate that caveolin-3 is localized to the sarcolemma, where it associates with the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex. However, it remains unknown which component of the dystrophin complex interacts with caveolin-3. Here, we demonstrate that caveolin-3 directly interacts with beta-dystroglycan, an integral membrane component of the dystrophin complex. Our results indicate that caveolin-3 co-localizes, co-fractionates, and co-immunoprecipitates with a fusion protein containing the cytoplasmic tail of beta-dystroglycan. In addition, we show that a novel WW-like domain within caveolin-3 directly recognizes the extreme C terminus of beta-dystroglycan that contains a PPXY motif. As the WW domain of dystrophin recognizes the same site within beta-dystroglycan, we also demonstrate that caveolin-3 can effectively block the interaction of dystrophin with beta-dystroglycan. In this regard, interaction of caveolin-3 with beta-dystroglycan may competitively regulate the recruitment of dystrophin to the sarcolemma. We discuss the possible implications of our findings in the context of Duchenne muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

10.
A new method for isolating transverse tubule membranes from rabbit skeletal muscle has been developed. This procedure has the advantage of being mild, fast, and producing with good yields a purified membrane fraction. The transverse tubule membranes are purified by a discontinuous sucrose density centrifugation after loading contaminating light sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles with calcium phosphate in the presence of ATP. Immunofluorescence staining of cryostat sections of rabbit psoas muscle with purified goat antibodies directed against the purified membranes shows that the reacting antigens are distributed at the boundary of the A and I bands of the myofibrils where transverse tubules are localized in mammalian muscle. The purified antibodies showed no cross-reactivity with sarcoplasmic reticulum, nor did they show any fluorescence staining of the muscle plasma membrane, indicating that the isolated membranes indeed originate from the transverse tubules. The transverse tubule fraction has a characteristic protein composition distinguishable from that of sarcoplasmic reticulum, a much higher cholesterol content than that of the crude microsomes, plasma membrane, and sarcoplasmic reticulum, and a phospholipid content about twice as high as that of sarcoplasmic reticulum and plasma membrane. The purified transverse tubule membrane has a distinct phospholipid composition with high contents of sphingomyelin and phosphatidylserine. A Mg2+-activated ATPase characteristic of the transverse tubule fraction undergoes a 20-30-fold increase in specific activity during purification. The levels of Ca2+-ATPase activity present in the purified transverse tubule fraction remain comparable to those of sarcoplasmic reticulum even after extensive removal of the latter.  相似文献   

11.
In innervated skeletal muscle fibers, dystrophin and beta-dystroglycan form rib-like structures (costameres) that appear as predominantly transverse stripes over Z and M lines. Here, we show that the orientation of these stripes becomes longitudinal in denervated muscles and transverse again in denervated electrically stimulated muscles. Skeletal muscle fibers express nonneural (muscle) agrin whose function is not well understood. In this work, a single application of > or = 10 nM purified recombinant muscle agrin into denervated muscles preserved the transverse orientation of costameric proteins that is typical for innervated muscles, as did a single application of > or = 1 microM neural agrin. At lower concentration, neural agrin induced acetylcholine receptor aggregates, which colocalized with longitudinally oriented beta-dystroglycan, dystrophin, utrophin, syntrophin, rapsyn, and beta 2-laminin in denervated unstimulated fibers and with the same but transversely oriented proteins in innervated or denervated stimulated fibers. The results indicate that costameres are plastic structures whose organization depends on electrical muscle activity and/or muscle agrin.  相似文献   

12.
We have found that dystrophin is highly concentrated at neuromuscular junctions and innervated membranes of the electric organ of Torpedo californica. In acetylcholine receptor-rich Torpedo membrane preparations dystrophin represents approximately 0.4% of total protein and can be extracted from these membranes by alkaline treatment in the absence of detergent, indicating that it is a peripheral membrane protein. Polyclonal antibodies raised against electrophoretically isolated Torpedo dystrophin cross-react with dystrophin in human muscle and unequivocally discriminate between normal and Duchenne muscular dystrophy patient's muscle. These results indicate that dystrophin is phylogenetically a highly conserved protein and that the relatively abundant dystrophin in electric organ would facilitate further investigations of its structure and function.  相似文献   

13.
Caveolin, a 20-24 kDa integral membrane protein, is a principal component of caveolar domains. Caveolin-1 is expressed predominantly in endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and adipocytes, while the expression of caveolin-3 is confined to muscle cells. However, their localization in various muscles has not been well documented. Using double-immunofluorescence labeling and confocal laser microscopy, we examined the localization of caveolins-1 and 3 in adult monkey skeletal, cardiac and uterine smooth muscles and the co-immunolocalization of these caveolins with dystrophin, which is a product of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene. In the skeletal muscle tissue, caveolin-3 was localized along the sarcolemma except for the transverse tubules, and co-immunolocalized with dystrophin, whereas caveolin-1 was absent except in the blood vessels of the muscle tissue. In cardiac muscle cells, caveolins-1 and -3 and dystrophin were co-immunolocalized on the sarcolemma and transverse tubules. In uterine smooth muscle cells, caveolin-1, but not caveolin-3, was co-immunolocalized with dystrophin on the sarcolemma.  相似文献   

14.
Two high-affinity mAbs were prepared against Torpedo dystrophin, an electric organ protein that is closely similar to human dystrophin, the gene product of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy locus. The antibodies were used to localize dystrophin relative to acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in electric organ and in skeletal muscle, and to show identity between Torpedo dystrophin and the previously described 270/300-kD Torpedo postsynaptic protein. Dystrophin was found in both AChR-rich and AChR-poor regions of the innervated face of the electroplaque. Immunogold experiments showed that AChR and dystrophin were closely intermingled in the AChR domains. In contrast, dystrophin appeared to be absent from many or all AChR-rich domains of the rat neuromuscular junction and of AChR clusters in cultured muscle (Xenopus laevis). It was present, however, in the immediately surrounding membrane (deep regions of the junctional folds, membrane domains interdigitating with and surrounding AChR domains within clusters). These results suggest that dystrophin may have a role in organization of AChR in electric tissue. Dystrophin is not, however, an obligatory component of AChR domains in muscle and, at the neuromuscular junction, its roles may be more related to organization of the junctional folds.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Membrane-associated guanylate kinases (MAGUKs) assemble ion channels, cell-adhesion molecules and components of second messenger cascades into synapses, and are therefore potentially important for co-ordinating synaptic strength and structure. Here, we have examined the targeting of the Drosophila MAGUK Discs-large (DLG) to larval neuromuscular junctions. RESULTS: During development, DLG was first found associated with the muscle subcortical compartment and plasma membrane, and later was recruited to the postsynaptic membrane. Using a transgenic approach, we studied how mutations in various domains of the DLGprotein affect DLG targeting. Deletion of the HOOK region-the region between the Src homology 3 (SH3) domain and the guanylate-kinase-like (GUK) domain-prevented association of DLG with the subcortical network and rendered the protein largely diffuse. Loss of the first two PDZ domains led to the formation of large clusters throughout the plasma membrane, with scant targeting to the neuromuscular junction. Proper trafficking of DLG missing the GUK domain depended on the presence of endogenous DLG. CONCLUSIONS: Postsynaptic targeting of DLG requires a HOOK-dependent association with extrasynaptic compartments, and interactions mediated by the first two PDZ domains. The GUK domain routes DLG between compartments, possibly by interacting with recently identified cytoskeletal-binding partners.  相似文献   

16.
Dystrophin plays an important role in skeletal muscle by linking the cytoskeleton and the extracellular matrix. The amino terminus of dystrophin binds to actin and possibly other components of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton, while the carboxy terminus associates with a group of integral and peripheral membrane proteins and glycoproteins that are collectively known as the dystrophin-associated protein (DAP) complex. We have generated transgenic/mdx mice expressing "full-length" dystrophin constructs, but with consecutive deletions within the COOH- terminal domains. These mice have enabled analysis of the interaction between dystrophin and members of the DAP complex and the effects that perturbing these associations have on the dystrophic process. Deletions within the cysteine-rich region disrupt the interaction between dystrophin and the DAP complex, leading to a severe dystrophic pathology. These deletions remove the beta-dystroglycan-binding site, which leads to a parallel loss of both beta-dystroglycan and the sarcoglycan complex from the sarcolemma. In contrast, deletion of the alternatively spliced domain and the extreme COOH terminus has no apparent effect on the function of dystrophin when expressed at normal levels. The proteins resulting from these latter two deletions supported formation of a completely normal DAP complex, and their expression was associated with normal muscle morphology in mdx mice. These data indicate that the cysteine-rich domain is critical for functional activity, presumably by mediating a direct interaction with beta-dystroglycan. However, the remainder of the COOH terminus is not required for assembly of the DAP complex.  相似文献   

17.
The aquaporin 4 (AQP4) water channel is present on the sarcolemma of fast-twitch-type skeletal myofibres. We have examined the distribution of AQP4 in relation to sarcolemmal domain structure and found that AQP4 protein is not evenly distributed on the sarcolemma. Immunofluorescence staining of isolated single myofibres indicated a punctate staining pattern overlapping with the dystrophin glycoprotein complex, but with the transverse tubule openings being left clear. Myotendinous and neuromuscular junctions also lacked AQP4, despite their high content of the dystrophin glycoprotein complex. The destruction of caveoli with methyl-β-cyclodextrin did not change the distribution of AQP4 at the sarcolemma. Moreover, AQP4 did not float with the caveolar marker caveolin-3 in sucrose gradients after Triton X-100 extraction at 4°C. These data indicated that AQP4 was not associated with caveoli. Surprisingly, m. flexor digitorum brevis fibres, although of the fast-twitch type, often lacked AQP4. Furthermore, those fibres harbouring AQP4 at the sarcolemma showed a regionalized distribution, suggesting that large areas were devoid of the protein. Blockage of the synthesized proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum with brefeldin A showed that, in spite of its regionalized sarcolemmal distribution, AQP4 was synthesized along the entire length of the fibres. These results suggest functional differences in the water permeability of the sarcolemma not only between the fast-twitch muscles, but also within single muscle fibres.  相似文献   

18.
The dystroglycan gene produces two products from a single mRNA, the extracellular alpha-dystroglycan and the transmembrane beta-dystroglycan. The Duchenne muscular dystrophy protein, dystrophin, associates with the muscle membrane via beta-dystroglycan, the WW domain of dystrophin interacting with a PPxY motif in beta-dystroglycan. A panel of four monoclonal antibodies (MANDAG1-4) was produced using the last 16 amino acids of beta-dystroglycan as immunogen. The mAbs recognized a 43 kDa band on Western blots of all cells and tissues tested and stained the sarcolemma in immunohistochemistry of skeletal muscle over a wide range of animal species. A monoclonal antibody (mAb) against the WW domain of dystrophin, MANHINGE4A, produced using a 16-mer synthetic peptide, recognized dystrophin on Western blots and also stained the sarcolemma. We have identified the precise sequences recognized by the mAbs using a phage-displayed random 15-mer peptide library. A 7-amino-acid consensus sequence SPPPYVP involved in binding all four beta-dystroglycan mAbs was identified by sequencing 17 different peptides selected from the library. PPY were the most important residues for three mAbs, but PxxVP were essential residues for a fourth mAb, MANDAG2. By sequencing five different random peptides from the library, the epitope on dystrophin recognized by mAb MANHINGE4A was identified as PWxRA in the first beta-strand of the WW domain, with the W and R residues invariably present. A recent three-dimensional structure confirms that the two epitopes are adjacent in the dystrophin-dystroglycan complex, highlighting the question of how the two interacting motifs can also be accessible to antibodies during immunolocalization in situ.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Caveolins are small integral membrane proteins with a vital role in the formation and function of caveolae. In this review, the role of caveolin-3, a predominantly muscle-specific member of the caveolin family, will be examined. We speculate that insights into the mechanism of caveolae formation may give clues into the formation of another plasma membrane domain, the transverse-tubule system of muscle cells and propose a role for cholesterol-enriched lipid rafts in this process. In addition, we review recent findings regarding caveolin-3 in differentiated muscle cells and, particularly, in dystrophic muscle.Abbreviations DIG detergent-insoluble glycosphingolipid-enriched complex - DPC dystrophin protein complex - eNOS/nNOS endothelial/neuronal nitric oxide synthase - pTT precursor transverse tubule - T-tubule transverse tubule  相似文献   

20.
It has been biochemically shown that dystrophin and alpha- and beta-dystroglycan form an oligomeric complex which links laminin, a component of the basement membrane, to components of the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton in skeletal muscle fibers. In the present study the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex and its structural relationships to laminin and subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton were ultrastructurally examined in crude surface membranes prepared from rat skeletal muscles. Sarcolemmal vesicles within crude surface membranes were identified and characterized by fine protrusions on their outer surface and electron-dense materials or patches associated with the inner surface. These two components were seen to be in register with each other across the sarcolemma. The fine protrusions were immunolabeled by anti-alpha-dystroglycan and reassociated with exogenous laminin. Immunolabeling in combination with laminin reassociation demonstrated that the electron-dense materials contained dystrophin at laminin-binding domains of the membrane. In addition, they were often associated with very fine filaments. These results provide morphological evidence for the biochemically proposed model of molecular array of dystrophin complex from the basement membrane to the subsarcolemmal cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

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