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1.
Myosin heavy chains (MHCs) from rat aorta smooth muscle cells were analyzed prior to and after these cells were placed into cell culture using sodium dodecyl sulfate-5% polyacrylamide gels, immunoblots, and two-dimensional peptide maps of tryptic digests. Rat aorta smooth muscle cells prior to culture were found to contain two MHCs (mass = 204 and 200 kDa) which cross-reacted with antibodies raised to smooth muscle myosin, but not with antibodies raised to platelet myosin. Tryptic peptide maps of these two MHCs showed no major differences when compared to each other and to maps of vas deferens and uterus smooth muscle MHCs. When rat aorta smooth muscle cells were placed into culture, the MHCs isolated from the cell extracts differed, depending on whether the cells were rapidly growing or postconfluent. Extracts from log-phase cultures contained predominantly MHCs that migrated more rapidly than smooth muscle myosin in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (mass = 196 kDa) and cross-reacted with antibodies raised to platelet myosin, but not to smooth muscle myosin. Tryptic peptide maps of this MHC were very similar to those obtained with MHCs from non-muscle sources such as platelets and fibroblasts. In contrast, extracts from postconfluent rat aorta cell cultures contained three MHCs (mass = 204, 200, and 196 kDa). Using immunoblots and peptide maps, the fastest migrating MHC was found to be identical to the 196-kDa non-muscle MHC, while the two slower migrating MHCs had the same properties as aorta smooth muscle MHCs prior to culture. These results suggest that smooth muscle cells grown in primary culture contain predominantly (greater than 80%) non-muscle myosin while actively growing, but at a postconfluent stage, contain more equivalent amounts of smooth muscle and non-muscle myosins.  相似文献   

2.
To describe phenotypic changes of human aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs), proportion of smooth muscle and nonmuscle variants of actin, myosin heavy chains (MHCs), vinculin, and caldesmon, during prenatal and several months of postnatal development was determined. In aortic SMCs from 9-10-week-old fetus, both nonmuscle and smooth muscle-specific variants of all four proteins were present, however, the nonmuscle forms were more abundant. During development, a shift towards the expression of muscle-specific variants was observed, although the time course of changes in protein variant content was not similar for all the proteins studied. By the 24th week of gestation, fractional content of alpha-smooth muscle actin and smooth muscle MHCs was rather close to that in the mature SMCs, and comprised approximately 80 and 90%, respectively, of the levels characteristic of SMCs from adult aortic media. On the contrary, fractional ratio of meta-vinculin and 150-kDa caldesmon was still rather low in the aorta from the 24-week-old fetus, did not increase in a 2-month-old child aorta, and did not reach the level characteristic of mature SMCs even in the 6-month-old child aorta. Thus changes in alpha-smooth muscle actin and smooth muscle MHC fractional content occur mainly during the prenatal period of development, before the 24th week of gestation; while meta-vinculin and the 150-kDa caldesmon proportion increases mainly in the postnatal period, during several months after birth. In the "Discussion," phenotypes of SMCs from developing aorta were compared to those from different layers of the adult aortic wall.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
The relationship between bradykinin action and its concentration was examined on isolated rings of the rabbit aorta, femoral artery, jugular vein and on isolated strips of the rat portal vein. The sensitivity of femoral artery and portal vein smooth muscles to bradykinin was disclosed. Venous smooth muscles were more sensitive to bradykinin as compared with arterial smooth muscles. Dissociation constants for the rabbit aorta, femoral artery, jugular vein and for the rat portal vein were 3.98 X 10(-6), 6.3 X 10(-6), 1.26 X 10(-7), and 7.6 X 10(-9)M, respectively. Effects of endogenous bradykinin in vivo might result from its primary action on the venous smooth muscle, action on the arterial smooth muscle and veno-arterial interactions.  相似文献   

5.
The heavy chain of smooth muscle myosin is phosphorylated in aorta cells   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The 204-kDa smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (MHC) from rat aorta smooth muscle cells was found to be phosphorylated following isolation of myosin from strips of intact aorta as well as from primary cultures of aorta cells. Two-dimensional maps of the tryptic peptides revealed that the phosphate was confined to only three peptides and gave a similar pattern for the MHC isolated from intact aorta strips and cultured cells. This map was quite different from the phosphopeptide map found for the 196-kDa MHC of nonmuscle myosin isolated from the same cell culture. Smooth muscle MHC purified from primary cell cultures was found to contain approximately 0.7 mol of phosphate/mol of MHC while the nonmuscle MHC contained approximately 0.8 mol of phosphate/mol of MHC. These observations raise the possibility of an additional regulatory mechanism in smooth muscle operating via MHC phosphorylation.  相似文献   

6.
Smooth muscle cells express isoforms of actin and myosin heavy chains (MHC). In early postnatal animals the nonmuscle (NM) actin and MHC isoforms in vascular (aorta) smooth muscle were present in relatively high percentages. More than 30% of the MHC and 40% of the actin isoforms were NM. The relative percentage of the NM isoforms decreased significantly as the animals reached maturity, with NM MHC less than 10% and NM actin less than 30% of the totals. Concurrent with this decrease in NM isoforms was an increase in the smooth muscle (SM) isoforms. The relative changes and time frame in which these changes occurred were very similar for the actin and MHC isoforms. In arterial tissue there were species differences for changes with development in the two SM MHC isoforms (SM1 and SM2). The ratio of SM1:SM2 in young rat aorta was approximately 0.5, while this same ratio was approximately 3 in young swine carotid. Both adult rats and swine had a SM1:SM2 MHC ratio of approximately 1.2. Rat bladder smooth muscle showed no significant change in NM vs SM ratio between young and old rats, while the SM1:SM2 ratio decreased from 2.7 to 1.7 between these age groups. The shifts in alpha and beta actin were similar to those in the vascular tissue, but of much smaller magnitude.  相似文献   

7.
The initial stages of myogenesis going in myoblasts include the stages of induction, determination, and differentiation. The induction and determination of cells in the myotomes are controlled by morphogenetic signals from neighboring tissues of the notochord and neural tube manifested as expression of genes of Shh and Wnt families, respectively. In fish (at the example of danio), this signal is passed to somite cells neighboring the notochord; later the cells migrate to the embryo surface and differentiate into slow muscle fibers. Synthesis of the main contractile proteins, primarily the components of myosin molecule—heavy chain (MHC) and individual isoforms of light chains (MLC1, MLC2, and MLC3)—are encoded by different genes during different ontogenetic stages. The peptide maps obtained after -chymotrypsin digestion of MHCs from larvae, fast and slow skeletal muscle of loach are different, which points to differences in their primary structure. In addition, considerable differences were revealed in the structure of MLC isoforms at different ontogenetic stages. The definitive fast muscle contained three light chain types, MLC1, MLC2, and MLC3; slow muscle, MLC1 and MLC3; while the larval muscle fibers included a specific larval MLCL in addition to MLC3.  相似文献   

8.
Isoelectric focusing of purified vascular smooth muscle myosin revealed two variants of the 17,000-dalton light chain subunits. The isoelectric points of the light chain variants were determined to be 4.13 (LC17a) and 4.19 (LC17b). Tryptic peptide maps of the two species of light chain generated by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography disclosed small but obvious differences in peptide composition while amino acid analyses of the variants were quite similar. Two-dimensional electrophoresis of extracts from various mammalian smooth muscles revealed tissue-specific differences in the relative content of LC17a and LC17b. Vascular (aorta, carotid, and pulmonary artery) muscles and tracheal smooth muscle contained both light chain variants while smooth muscle of the gastrointestinal tract (stomach and jejunum) contained LC17a only. The actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activities of both phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated stomach (LC17b = 0) and aortic (LC17b = 40%) myosins were compared. In the presence of saturating tropomyosin, a 2-fold difference in Vmax was measured: phosphorylated, aortic, 0.119 +/- 0.009 versus stomach, 0.239 +/- 0.012 mumol of PO4 liberated/min/mg of myosin; nonphosphorylated, aortic, 0.065 +/- 0.004 versus stomach, 0.123 +/- 0.004 mumol of PO4 liberated/min/mg of myosin. In addition, the Vmax of myosin subfragment-1 ATPase from bovine aortic, pulmonary artery, and stomach myosins (LC17b contents, 40, 20, and 0%, respectively) was found to decrease in direct proportion to the LC17b content. Our results suggest that isoforms of the 17,000-dalton light chain subunits of mammalian smooth muscle myosin could play an important role in modulating actomyosin ATPase activity.  相似文献   

9.
10.
We examined whether the gizzard MHC gene is expressed in other smooth muscle tissues and, if so, whether there exist any smooth muscle MHC isoforms at the mRNA level. Northern blot analysis showed that the gizzard MHC gene was also expressed in the aorta and jejunum, but not in the pectoralis muscle or in fibroblasts. This indicates that striated muscle and non-muscle MHC isoforms are encoded in genes distinct from the smooth muscle MHC gene. Further, nuclease S1 mapping showed that the aortic smooth muscle MHC mRNA was distinct from the gizzard mRNA in the 5'-terminal coding region. Both of these mRNA species are expressed in the jejunum. These observations suggest that there exist at least two chicken smooth muscle MHC isoforms, vascular-type and intestinal-type, and that these isoforms are generated from a single-copy gene, probably by an alternative mRNA processing mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
A chemical comparison of tropomyosins from muscle and non-muscle tissues.   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Tropomyosins from six different calf tissues: aorta (smooth muscle), skeletal muscle, heart, brain, pancreas and platelets have been isolated, as well as a tropomyosin from mouse fibroblasts. The three muscle tropomyosins have identical polypeptide molecular weights (35,000), paracrystal periodicity and fine structure, and very similar peptide maps. The four non-muscle tropomyosins also have identical polypeptide molecular weights (30,000), paracrystal periodicity and fine structure, and very similar peptide maps. All tropomyosins examined have the same C-terminal amino acid, isoleucine and a blocked N terminal. These findings indicate that muscle and non-muscle tropomyosins are grouped into two similar but non-identical classes of protein. The two classes have at least ten peptide differences out of 31 total peptides, each group having several peptides not found in the other group. This suggests that the two classes of tropomyosins are coded for by different gene classes. It is likely that both gene classes evolved from an ancestral gene by a process involving gene duplication.Peptide maps of skeletal muscle tropomyosins from rabbit, calf and chick, and of non-muscle tropomyosins from rabbit, mouse and calf show few species differences. This suggests that tropomyosin is a highly conserved molecule.  相似文献   

12.
Vertebrate smooth muscle myosin heavy chains (MHCs) exist as two isoforms with molecular masses of 204 and 200 kDa (MHC204 and MHC200) that are generated from a single gene by alternative splicing of mRNA (Nagai, R., Kuro-o, M., Babij, P., and Periasamy, M. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9734-9737). A dimer of two MHCs associated with two pairs of myosin light chains forms a functional myosin molecule. To investigate the isoform composition of the MHCs in native myosin, antibodies specific for MHC204 were generated and used to immunoprecipitate purified bovine aortic smooth muscle myosin from a solution containing equal amounts of each isoform. MHC204 quantitatively removed from this mixture was completely free of MHC200. Immunoprecipitation of the supernatant with an antiserum that recognizes both isoforms equally well revealed that only MHC200 remained. We conclude that only homodimers of MHC204 and MHC200 exist under these conditions. A method is described for the purification of enzymatically active MHC204 and myosin on a protein G-agarose high performance liquid chromatography column containing immobilized MHC204 antibodies. We show, using an in vitro motility assay, that the movement of actin filaments by myosin containing 204-kDa heavy chains (0.435 +/- 0.115 microns/s) was not significantly different from that of myosin containing 200-kDa heavy chains (0.361 +/- 0.078 microns/s) or from myosin containing equal amounts of each heavy chain isoform (0.347 +/- 0.082 microns/s).  相似文献   

13.
14.
We explored the hypothesis that discrepancies in the literature concerning the nature of myosin expression in cultured smooth muscle cells are due to the appearance of a new form of myosin heavy chain (MHC) in vitro. Previously, we used a very porous sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis system to detect two MHCs in intact smooth muscles (SM1 and SM2) which differ by less than 2% in molecular weight (Rovner, A. S., Thompson, M. M., and Murphy, R. A. (1986) Am. J. Physiol. 250, C861-C870). Myosin-containing homogenates of rat aorta cells in primary culture were electrophoresed on this gel system, and Western blots were performed using smooth muscle-specific and nonmuscle-specific myosin antibodies. Subconfluent, rapidly proliferating cultures contained a form of heavy chain not found in rat aorta cells in vivo (NM) with electrophoretic mobility and antigenicity identical to the single unique heavy chain seen in nonmuscle cells. Moreover, these cultures expressed almost none of the smooth muscle heavy chains. In contrast, postconfluent growth-arrested cultures expressed increased levels of the two smooth muscle heavy chains, along with large amounts of NM. Analysis of cultures pulsed with [35S] methionine indicated that subconfluent cells were synthesizing almost exclusively NM, whereas postconfluent cells synthesized SM1 and SM2 as well as larger amounts of NM. Similar patterns of MHC content and synthesis were found in subconfluent and postconfluent passaged cells. These results show that cultured vascular smooth muscle cells undergo differential expression of smooth muscle- and nonmuscle-specific MHC forms with changes in their growth state, which appear to parallel changes in expression of the smooth muscle and nonmuscle forms of actin (Owens, G. K., Loeb, A., Gordon, D., and Thompson, M. M. (1986) J. Cell Biol. 102, 343-352). The reappearance of the smooth muscle MHCs in postconfluent cells suggests that density-related growth arrest promotes cytodifferentiation, but the continued expression of the nonmuscle MHC form in these smooth muscle cells indicates that other factors are required to induce the fully differentiated state while in culture.  相似文献   

15.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1989,92(4):291-299
The expression of four myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, avian slow-tonic (ATO) or neonatal-twitch (ANT) and mammalian slow-twitch (MST) or fast-twitch (MFT) in intrafusal fibers was examined by immunocytochemistry of spindles in the tenuissimus muscle of adult cats. The predominant MHCs expressed by nuclear bag fibers were ATO and MST, whereas the MHCs prevalent in nuclear chain fibers were ANT and MFT. The expression of these isoforms of MHC was not uniform along the length of intrafusal fibers. In general, both bag and chain fibers expressed avian MHC in the intracapsular region and mammalian MHC in the extracapsular region. The nonuniform expression of MHCs observed along the length of bag and chain fibers implies that different genes are activated in myonuclei located in the intracapsular and extracapsular regions of the same muscle fiber. Regional differences in gene activation might result from a greater effect of afferents on myonuclei located near the equator of intrafusal fibers then on myonuclei outside the spindle capsule.  相似文献   

16.
Summary The expression of four myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, avian slow-tonic (ATO) or neonatal-twitch (ANT) and mammalian slow-twitch (MST) or fast-twitch (MFT) in intrafusal fibers was examined by immunocytochemistry of spindles in the tenuissimus muscle of adult eats. The predominant MHCs expressed by nuclear bag fibers were ATO and MST, whereas the MHCs prevalent in nuclear chain fibers were ANT and MFT. The expression of these isoforms of MHC was not uniform along the length of intrafusal fibers. In general, both bag and chain fibers expressed avian MHC in the intracapsular region and mammalian MHC in the extracapsular region. The nonuniform expression of MHCs observed along the length of bag and chain fibers implies that different genes are activated in myonuclei located in the intracapsular and extracapsular regions of the same muscle fiber. Regional differences in gene activation might result from a greater effect of afferents on myonuclei located near the equator of intrafusal fibers then on myonuclei outside the spindle capsule.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of prostacyclin (PGI2) and its stable metabolite 6-oxo-PGF1alpha on various bioassay tissues are compared with those of PGE2 and PGF2alpha, using the cascade superfusion method. On vascular smooth muscle, PGI2 caused relaxation of all tissues tested except the rabbit aorta. PGE2 relaxed rabbit coeliac and mesenteric artery but contracted bovine coronary artery and had no effect on rabbit aorta. 6-oxo-PGF1alpha was ineffective at the concentrations tested. On gastro-intestinal smooth muscle, PGI2 contracted strips of rat and hamster stomach and the chick rectum. It was less potent than PGE2 or PGF2alpha. None of these substances contracted the cat terminal ileum. 6-oxo-PGF1alpha was inactive on these tissues at the doses tested. PGI2 was less active than PGE2 or PGF2alpha in contracting guinea-pig trachea and rat uterus; 6-oxo-PGF1alpha was active only on the rat uterus. Thus, PGI2 can be distinguished from the other stable prostaglandins using the cascade method of superfusion.  相似文献   

18.
The expression of fast myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms was examined in developing bicep brachii, lateral gastrocnemius, and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of inbred normal White Leghorn chickens (Line 03) and genetically related inbred dystrophic White Leghorn chickens (Line 433). Utilizing a highly characterized monoclonal antibody library we employed ELISA, Western blot, immunocytochemical, and MHC epitope mapping techniques to determine which MHCs were present in the fibers of these muscles at different stages of development. The developmental pattern of MHC expression in the normal bicep brachii was uniform with all fibers initially accumulating embryonic MHC similar to that of the pectoralis muscle. At hatching the neonatal isoform was expressed in all fibers; however, unlike in the pectoralis muscle the embryonic MHC isoform did not disappear. With increasing age the neonatal MHC was repressed leaving the embryonic MHC as the only detectable isoform present in the adult bicep brachii muscle. While initially expressing embryonic MHC in ovo, the post-hatch normal gastrocnemius expressed both embryonic and neonatal MHCs. However, unlike the bicep brachii muscle, this pattern of expression continued in the adult muscle. The adult normal gastrocnemius stained heterogeneously with anti-embryonic and anti-neonatal antibodies indicating that mature fibers could contain either isoform or both. Neither the bicep brachii muscle nor the lateral gastrocnemius muscle reacted with the adult specific antibody at any stage of development. In the developing posterior latissimus dorsi muscle (PLD), embryonic, neonatal, and adult isoforms sequentially appeared; however, expression of the embryonic isoform continued throughout development. In the adult PLD, both embryonic and adult MHCs were expressed, with most fibers expressing both isoforms. In dystrophic neonates and adults virtually all fibers of the bicep brachii, gastrocnemius, and PLD muscles were identical and contained embryonic and neonatal MHCs. These results corroborate previous observations that there are alternative programs of fast MHC expression to that found in the pectoralis muscle of the chicken (M.T. Crow and F.E. Stockdale, 1986, Dev. Biol. 118, 333-342), and that diversification into fibers containing specific MHCs fails to occur in the fast muscle fibers of the dystrophic chicken. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that avian muscular dystrophy is a developmental disorder that is associated with alterations in isoform switching during muscle maturation.  相似文献   

19.
We report here the isolation and characterization of cDNA and genomic sequences corresponding to a rat embryonic myosin heavy chain (MHC) protein. This gene, which is present as a single copy in the rat genome, comprises about 25 kilobase pairs of DNA and contains approximately 80% intronic sequences. The embryonic MHC gene belongs to a highly conserved multigene family, and exhibits a high degree of nucleotide and amino acid sequence conservation with other sarcomeric MHC genes from nematode to man. S1 nuclease mapping experiments using cDNA and genomic probes show that this MHC gene is transiently expressed during skeletal muscle development. Its mRNA is detected in fetal skeletal muscle during early development and persists up to 2 weeks after birth with the overlapping expression of neonatal and adult skeletal MHC mRNAs. However, this MHC is not expressed in the adult skeletal muscle with the exception of extraocular muscle fibers. The transient expression during muscle development of the isoform produced by this gene and its sequential replacement by other MHCs raises interesting questions about the mechanism controlling MHC isozyme transitions and the physiological significance of the individual MHCs in muscle fibers.  相似文献   

20.
Vascular remodeling after mechanoinjury largely depends on the migration of smooth muscle cells, an initial key step to wound healing. However, the role of the second messenger system, in particular, the cAMP signal, in regulating such remodeling remains controversial. Exchange protein activated by cAMP (Epac) has been identified as a new target molecule of the cAMP signal, which is independent from PKA. We thus examined whether Epac plays a distinct role from PKA in vascular remodeling. To examine the role of Epac and PKA in migration, we used primary culture smooth muscle cells from both the fetal and adult rat aorta. A cAMP analog selective to PKA, 8-(4-parachlorophenylthio)-cAMP (pCPT-cAMP), decreased cell migration, whereas an Epac-selective analog, 8-pCPT-2'-O-Me-cAMP, enhanced migration. Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of PKA decreased cell migration, whereas that of Epac1 significantly enhanced cell migration. Striking morphological differences were observed between pCPT-cAMP- and 8-pCPT-2'-O-Me-cAMP-treated aortic smooth muscle cells. Furthermore, overexpression of Epac1 enhanced the development of neointimal formation in fetal rat aortic tissues in organ culture. When the mouse femoral artery was injured mechanically in vivo, we found that the expression of Epac1 was upregulated in vascular smooth muscle cells, whereas that of PKA was downregulated with the progress of neointimal thickening. Our findings suggest that Epac1, in opposition to PKA, increases vascular smooth muscle cell migration. Epac may thus play an important role in advancing vascular remodeling and restenosis upon vascular injury.  相似文献   

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