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1.
Immunochemical studies have identified a distinct myosin heavy chain (MHC) in the chicken embryonic skeletal muscle that was undetectable in this muscle in the posthatch period by both immunocytochemical and the immunoblotting procedures. This embryonic isoform, identified by antibody 96J, which also recognises the cardiac and SM1 myosin heavy chains, differs from the embryonic myosin heavy chain belonging to the fast class described previously. Although the fast embryonic isoform is a major species present in the leg and pectoral embryonic muscles, slow embryonic isoform was present in significant amounts during early embryonic development. Immunocytochemical studies using another monoclonal antibody designated 9812, which is specific for SM1 MHC, showed this isoform to be restricted to only presumptive slow muscle cells. From these studies and those reported on the changes in SM2 MHC, it is proposed that as is the case for the fast class, there also exists a slow class of myosin heavy chains composed of slow embryonic, SM1 and SM2 isoforms. The differentiation of a muscle cell involves transitions in a series of myosin isozymes in both presumptive fast and slow skeletal muscle cells.  相似文献   

2.
1. Structural and enzymic properties of myosins from atrial and ventricular cardiac muscle of the chicken were investigated and compared with myosins from the fast skeletal pectoralis and the slow skeletal anterior latissimus dorsi muscle. 2. The Ca2+-ATPase activity, both in function of pH and [K+], of atrial myosin closely resembled that of the fast pectoralis myosin, whereas the enzymic properties of ventricular myosin were similar to those of slow skeletal myosin. 3. By sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on gradient gel and two-dimensional electrophoresis, involving isoelectric focusing in the first dimension and SDS gel electrophoresis in the second dimension, no difference could be demonstrated in the light-chain pattern of atrial and ventricular myosin. Complete identity was also found between anterior latissimus dorsi and cardiac light chains. 4. Electrophoretic analysis of soluble peptides released by tryptic digestion of myosin and electron microscopic study of light meromyosin paracrystals showed significant differences between the heavy chains of atrial and ventricular myosins, as well as between the heavy chains of cardiac and skeletal myosins. 5. The results confirm previous immunochemical findings and provide direct biochemical evidence for the existence of a new, unique type of myosin in the chicken atrial tissue.  相似文献   

3.
Regenerating areas of adult chicken fast muscle (pectoralis major) and slow muscle (anterior latissimus dorsi) were examined in order to determine synthesis patterns of myosin light chains, heavy chains and tropomyosin. In addition, these patterns were also examined in muscle cultures derived from satellite cells of adult fast and slow muscle. One week after cold-injury the regenerating fast muscle showed a pattern of synthesis that was predominately embryonic. These muscles synthesized the embryonic myosin heavy chain, beta-tropomyosin and reduced amounts of myosin fast light chain-3 which are characteristic of embryonic fast muscle but synthesized very little myosin slow light chains. The regenerating slow muscle, however, showed a nearly complete array of embryonic peptides including embryonic myosin heavy chain, fast and slow myosin light chains and both alpha-fast and slow tropomyosins. Peptide map analysis of the embryonic myosin heavy chains synthesized by regenerating fast and slow muscles showed them to be identical. Thus, in both muscles there is a return to embryonic patterns during regeneration but this return appears to be incomplete in the pectoralis major. By 4 weeks postinjury both regenerating fast and slow muscles had stopped synthesizing embryonic isoforms of myosin and tropomyosin and had returned to a normal adult pattern of synthesis. Adult fast and slow muscles yielded a satellite cell population that formed muscle fibers in culture. Fibers derived from either population synthesized the embryonic myosin heavy chain in addition to alpha-fast and beta-tropomyosin. Thus, muscle fibers derived in culture from satellite cells of fast and slow muscles synthesized a predominately embryonic pattern of myosin heavy chains and tropomyosin. In addition, however, the satellite cell-derived myotubes from fast muscle synthesized only fast myosin light chains while the myotubes derived from slow muscle satellite cells synthesized both fast and slow myosin light chains. Thus, while both kinds of satellite cells produced embryonic type myotubes in culture the overall patterns were not identical. Satellite cells of fast and slow muscle appear therefore to have diverged from each other in their commitment during maturation in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
P K Umeda  R Zak  M Rabinowitz 《Biochemistry》1980,19(9):1955-1965
Fast and slow myosin heavy chain mRNAs were isolated by indirect immunoprecipitation of polysomes from 14-day-old embryonic chick leg muscle. The antibodies were prepared against myosin heavy chains purified by NaDod-SO4-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and were shown to be specific for fast and slow myosin heavy chains. The RNA fractions directed the synthesis of myosin heavy chains in a cell-free translation system from wheat germ. Several smaller peptides were also synthesized in lower concentrations. These probably are partial products of myosin heavy chains, since they are immunoprecipitated with antibodies to myosin heavy chains. Immunoprecipitation of the translation products with the antibodies to fast and slow myosin heavy chains showed the RNA preparations to be approximately 94% enriched for fast myosin heavy chain mRNA and approximately 84% enriched for slow myosin heavy chain mRNA with respect to myosin HC type. Peptides having slightly different mobilities on NaDodSO4-polyacrylamide gels were immunoprecipitated by antibodies to fast and slow myosin heavy chains.  相似文献   

5.
During development of fast contracting skeletal muscle in the rat hindleg, embryonic and neonatal forms of the myosin heavy chain are present prior to the accumulation of the adult fast type ( Whalen , R. G., Sell, S. M., Butler-Browne, G.S., Schwartz, K., Bouveret, P., and Pinset -H arstr ?m, I. (1981) Nature (Lond.) 292, 805-809). Polypeptide mapping of the heavy chain subunit using partial proteolysis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate has shown differences in the cleavage patterns for these various heavy chains. Using this technique, we have now examined subfragments, which represent functional domains, from several different myosin isozymes. The heavy chains of the S-1 subfragments containing either light chain 1 or light chain 3 are indistinguishable for the neonatal or fast myosin isozymes. We also isolated the S-1 fragments and the alpha-helical COOH-terminal half of the molecule (rod) from rat embryonic, neonatal, and adult fast and slow myosin, as well as myosin from cardiac ventricles. All of these S-1 and rod fragments were different, indicating that the previously reported differences among these different myosin heavy chain isozymes are located in both the S-1 and rod subfragments for all myosins examined. However, the polypeptide maps of neonatal and adult fast S-1 show clear similarities, as do the maps of slow and cardiac S-1. These similarities in the two pairs of polypeptide maps were confirmed by the results of immunoblotting experiments using antibodies to adult fast and to slow myosin.  相似文献   

6.
Digestion of insoluble myosin with soluble papain produces heavy meromyosin subfragment 1 (HMM-S-1) having ATPase activity and the ability to combine with actin. These fragments of myosin do not undergo appreciable changes in ATPase activity, chromatographic behavior, or actin combining ability during digestion up to 2 h but, as shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, several splits occur in both the heavy and light polypeptide chains. The largest fragment of heavy chain present in fast, slow, cardiac and embryonic HMM-S-1 has a mass of 89,000 daltons. This fragment undergoes further degradation resulting in fragments having masses of the order of 70,000, 50,000, and 27,000 daltons. The latter fragment and other material resulting from the proteolysis of myosin appear as bands in that region of the gels where the light chains are found in electrophoretograms of the parent myosin. The precise size of the fragments and the rates of their formation depend on the type of myosin; slow and cardiac HMM-S-1 and their fragments show greater stability. Embryonic myosin has properties intermediate between those of fast skeletal and cardiac myosin. Experiments involving the combination of HMM-S-1 with actin and experiments with glutaraldehyde cross linking and chromatography on Sephadex G-200 indicate that the fragments separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis are held together by noncovalent forces in HMM-S-1.  相似文献   

7.
A simple and fast method is presented for the isolation and separation of human cardiac myosin light chains. The method requires only a crude myosin for splitting into heavy and light chains. The separation of the light chains is made by isoelectric precipitation with good yield.  相似文献   

8.
9.
《The Journal of cell biology》1985,101(5):1643-1650
We prepared monoclonal antibodies specific for fast or slow classes of myosin heavy chain isoforms in the chicken and used them to probe myosin expression in cultures of myotubes derived from embryonic chicken myoblasts. Myosin heavy chain expression was assayed by gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting of extracted myosin and by immunostaining of cultures of myotubes. Myotubes that formed from embryonic day 5-6 pectoral myoblasts synthesized both a fast and a slow class of myosin heavy chain, which were electrophoretically and immunologically distinct, but only the fast class of myosin heavy chain was synthesized by myotubes that formed in cultures of embryonic day 8 or older myoblasts. Furthermore, three types of myotubes formed in cultures of embryonic day 5-6 myoblasts: one that contained only a fast myosin heavy chain, a second that contained only a slow myosin heavy chain, and a third that contained both a fast and a slow heavy chain. Myotubes that formed in cultures of embryonic day 8 or older myoblasts, however, were of a single type that synthesized only a fast class of myosin heavy chain. Regardless of whether myoblasts from embryonic day 6 pectoral muscle were cultured alone or mixed with an equal number of myoblasts from embryonic day 12 muscle, the number of myotubes that formed and contained a slow class of myosin was the same. These results demonstrate that the slow class of myosin heavy chain can be synthesized by myotubes formed in cell culture, and that three types of myotubes form in culture from pectoral muscle myoblasts that are isolated early in development, but only one type of myotube forms from older myoblasts; and they suggest that muscle fiber formation probably depends upon different populations of myoblasts that co-exist and remain distinct during myogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
Types of myosin light chains and tropomyosins present in various regions and at different developmental stages of embryonic and posthatched chicken breast muscle (pectoralis major) have been characterized by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. In the embryonic muscle all areas appear to accumulate both slow and fast forms of mysoin light chains in addition to α and β forms of tropomyosin. During development regional differences in myosin and tropomyosin expression become apparent. Slow myosin subunits become gradually restricted to areas of the anterior region of the muscle and finally become localized to a small red strip found on its anterior deep surface. This red region is characterized by the presence of slow and fast myosin light chains, α-fast, α-slow, and β-tropomyosin. In all other areas of the muscle examined only fast myosin light chains, β-tropomyosin and the α-fast form of tropomyosin, are found. In addition, β-tropomyosin also gradually becomes lost in the posterior regions of the developing breast muscle. In the adult, the red strip area represents less than 1% of the total pectoralis major mass and of the myosin extracted from this area approximately 15% was present as an isozyme that comigrated on nondenaturing gels with myosin from a slow muscle (anterior latissimus dorsi). The red region accumulates therefore fast as well as slow muscle myosin. Thus while the adult chicken pectoralis major is over 99% fast white muscle, the embryonic muscle displays a significant and changing capacity to accumulate both fast and slow muscle peptides.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, myosin types in human skeletal muscle fibers were investigated with electrophoretic techniques. Single fibers were dissected out of lyophilized surgical biopsies and typed by staining for myofibrillar ATPase after preincubation in acid or alkaline buffers. After 14C-labelling of the fiber proteins in vitro by reductive methylation, the myosin light chain pattern was analysed on two-dimensional gels and the myosin heavy chains were investigated by one-dimensional peptide mapping. Surprisingly, human type I fibers, which contained only the slow heavy chain, were found to contain variable amounts of fast myosin light chains in addition to the two slow light chains LC1s and LC2s. The majority of the type I fibers in normal human muscle showed the pattern LC1s, LC2s and LC1f. Further evidence for the existence in human muscle of a hybrid myosin composed of a slow heavy chain with fast and slow light chains comes from the analysis of purified human myosin in the native state by pyrophosphate gel electrophoresis. With this method, a single band corresponding to slow myosin was obtained; this slow myosin had the light chain composition LC1s, LC2s and LC1f. Type IIA and IIB fibers, on the other hand, revealed identical light chain patterns consisting of only the fast light chains LC1f, LC2f and LC3f but were found to have different myosin havy chains. On the basis of the results presented, we suggest that the histochemical ATPase normally used for fibre typing is determined by the myosin heavy chain type (and not by the light chains). Thus, in normal human muscle a number of 'hybrid' myosins were found to occur, namely two extreme forms of fast myosins which have the same light chains but different heavy chains (IIA and IIB) and a continuum of slow forms consisting of the same heavy chain and slow light chains with a variable fast light chain composition. This is consistent with the different physiological roles these fibers are thought to have in muscle contraction.  相似文献   

12.
The myosin heavy chain composition of muscle fibers that comprise the red strip of the pectoralis major was determined at different stages of development and following adult denervation. Using a library of characterized monoclonal antibodies we found that slow fibers of the red strip do not react with antibodies to any of the fast myosin heavy chains of the superficial pectoralis. Immunocytochemical analysis of the fast fibers of the adult red strip revealed that they contain the embryonic fast myosin heavy chain rather than the adult pectoral isoform found throughout the adult white pectoralis. This was confirmed using immunoblot analysis of myosin heavy chain peptide maps. We show that during development of the red strip both neonatal and adult myosin heavy chains appear transiently, but then disappear during maturation. Furthermore, while the fibers of the superficial pectoralis reexpress the neonatal isoform as a result of denervation, the fibers of the red strip reexpress the adult isoform. Our data demonstrate a new developmental program of fast myosin heavy chain expression in the chicken and suggest that the heterogeneity of myosin heavy chain expression in adult fast fibers results from repression of specific isoforms by innervation.  相似文献   

13.
Myosin subunit composition in human developing muscle.   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Previous pyrophosphate-gel studies have reported the existence of embryonic neonatal myosin isoenzymes in human developing muscle. The present investigation was undertaken to characterize their subunit composition more precisely. Two immature muscle myosins are contrasted with adult myosin: neonatal myosin and foetal myosin. The neonatal form of myosin is weakly cross-reactive with rabbit slow myosin and contains only fast-type light chains (LC), LC1F and LC2F. The associated heavy chains consist of a single electrophoretic component that reacts exclusively with antibodies against human foetal myosin and has a mobility and peptide pattern distinct from that of adult fast and slow heavy chains. Foetal myosin is distinguished by the presence of low amounts of a heavy chain immunologically cross-reactive with the adult slow form and of two additional light-chain components: a LC2S light chain and a foetal-specific light chain (LCemb.). The foetal-specific light chain, as shown by one-dimensional-peptide-map analysis, is structurally unrelated to both LC1S and LC1F light chains of human adult myosin. We conclude from these results that the ontogenesis of human muscle myosin shares certain common features with that observed in other species, except for the persistence until birth of a foetal form of heavy chain (HCemb.).  相似文献   

14.
During several months of denervation, rat mixed muscles lose slow myosin, though with variability among animals. Immunocytochemical studies showed that all the denervated fibers of the hemidiaphragm reacted with anti-fast myosin, while many reacted with anti-slow myosin as well. This has left open the question as to whether multiple forms of myosin co-exist within individual fibers or a unique, possibly embryonic, myosin is present, which shares epitopes with fast and slow myosins. Furthermore, one can ask if the reappearance of embryonic myosin in chronically denervated muscle is related both to its re-expression in the pre-existing fibers and to cell regeneration. To answer these questions we studied the myosin heavy chains from individual fibers of the denervated hemidiaphragm by SDS PAGE and morphologically searched for regenerative events in the long term denervated muscle. 3 mo after denervation the severely atrophic fibers of the hemidiaphragm showed either fast or a mixture of fast and slow myosin heavy chains. Structural analysis of proteins sequentially extracted from muscle cryostat sections showed that slow myosin was still present 16 mo after denervation, in spite of the loss of the selective distribution of fast and slow features. Therefore muscle fibers can express adult fast myosin not only when denervated during their differentiation but also after the slow program has been expressed for a long time. Light and electron microscopy showed that the long-term denervated muscle maintained a steady-state atrophy for the rat's life span. Some of the morphological features indicate that aneural regeneration events continuously occur and significantly contribute to the increasing uniformity of the myosin gene expression in long-term denervated diaphragm.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in myosin isozymes during development of chicken gizzard muscle   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The distribution of myosin isozymes in embryonic and adult chicken gizzard muscle were examined by electrophoresis in a non-denaturing gel system (pyrophosphate acrylamide gel electrophoresis), and both light and heavy chains of embryonic and adult myosin isozymes were compared. In pyrophosphate acrylamide gel electrophoresis, there were three isozyme components in embryonic gizzard myosin, but only one isozyme in adult gizzard myosin. The mobility of the fastest migrating embryonic isozyme was similar to that of the adult isozyme. The three embryonic isozymes differ from each other in the light chain distribution. Two of them contain an embryo-specific myosin light chain, which is characterized by its molecular weight and isoelectric point, whereas the other embryonic myosin isozyme contained the same light chains as the adult myosin. The pattern of peptide fragments of embryonic heavy chain produced by digestion with alpha-chymotrypsin in the presence of SDS was not distinguishable from that of adult myosin heavy chain. Thus there are myosin isozymes specific to embryonic gizzard muscle which exhibit embryo-specific light chain compositions, but are similar to adult gizzard myosin in their heavy chain structure.  相似文献   

16.
The latest data are reviewed concerning identification of myosin from the skeletal muscle during embryonic and postnatal development in vertebrates. The data are given on the composition of light subunits and specificity of heavy chains of the early isoforms obtained by electrophoresis, peptide mapping, DNA-RNA hybridization, as well as immunological methods with poly-and monoclonals. The substitution of embryonic heavy chains by neonatal and definitive ones is discussed. The following items are also considered: early isoforms of the fast and slow myosin types and, in particular, endogenous program directing the muscle development and protein synthesis towards the "fast phenotype", which is modulated by neurostimulation and other physiological factors inducing slow myosin type. The enzymatic activity of the early isoforms and its physiological importance in embryogenesis are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Antibodies were formed against the myosin light chains isolated from chicken fast skeletal, slow skeletal, and cardiac muscle and the antigenicities of the light chains were compared by double immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis. It was shown that fast light chains are immunologically different from light chains of slow and cardiac myosin, while the slow and cardiac muscle light chains have similar immunological characteristics; that is, the light chains of apparent molecular weight about 27,000 daltons in SDS-acrylamide gel electrophoresis of slow and cardiac muscle are immunologically indistinguishable, and the other light chains of apparent molecular weight about 19,000 daltons of both muscles include a common antigenic site.  相似文献   

18.
Isozymes of myosin have been localized with respect to individual fibers in differentiating skeletal muscles of the rat and chicken using immunocytochemistry. The myosin light chain pattern has been analyzed in the same muscles by two-dimensional PAGE. In the muscles of both species, the response to antibodies against fast and slow adult myosin is consistent with the speed of contraction of the muscle. During early development, when speed of contraction is slow in future fast and slow muscles, all the fibers react strongly with anti-slow as well as with anti-fast myosin. As adult contractile properties are acquired, the fibers react with antibodies specific for either fast or slow myosin, but few fibers react with both antibodies. The myosin light chain pattern slow shows a change with development: the initial light chains (LC) are principally of the fast type, LC1(f), and LC2(f), independent of whether the embryonic muscle is destined to become a fast or a slow muscle in the adult. The LC3(f), light chain does not appear in significant amounts until after birth, in agreement with earlier reports. The predominance of fast light chains during early stages of development is especially evident in the rat soleus and chicken ALD, both slow muscles, in which LC1(f), is gradually replaced by the slow light chain, LC1(s), as development proceeds. Other features of the light chain pattern include an "embryonic" light chain in fetal and neonatal muscles of the rat, as originally demonstrated by R.G. Whalen, G.S. Butler- Browne, and F. Gros. (1978. J. Mol. Biol. 126:415-431.); and the presence of approximately 10 percent slow light chains in embryonic pectoralis, a fast white muscle in the adult chicken. The response of differentiating muscle fibers to anti-slow myosin antibody cannot, however, be ascribed solely to the presence of slow light chains, since antibody specific for the slow heavy chain continues to react with all the fibers. We conclude that during early development, the myosin consists of a population of molecules in which the heavy chain can be associated with a fast, slow, or embryonic light chain. Biochemical analysis has shown that this embryonic heavy chain (or chains) is distinct from adult fast or slow myosin (R.G. Whalen, K. Schwartz, P. Bouveret, S.M. Sell, and F. Gros. 1979. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:5197-5201. J.I. Rushbrook, and A. Stracher. 1979. Proc Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:4331-4334. P.A. Benfield, S. Lowey, and D.D. LeBlanc. 1981. Biophys. J. 33(2, Pt. 2):243a[Abstr.]). Embryonic myosin, therefore, constitutes a unique class of molecules, whose synthesis ceases before the muscle differentiates into an adult pattern of fiber types.  相似文献   

19.
The myosin isozymes present in the developing rat soleus muscle from 1 week to 6 weeks after birth were investigated using biochemical and immunological methods. Electrophoresis of native myosin reveals that adult slow myosin is present in the soleus as early as 1 week after birth. At this time, embryonic and neonatal myosin can also be demonstrated. Using an immunotransfer technique, the presence of slow myosin heavy chain can be demonstrated at all time points examined whereas neonatal myosin heavy chain diminishes in quantity between 2 and 3 weeks, and is undetectable in the adult soleus. Specific polyclonal antibodies were prepared to embryonic, neonatal, and adult fast and slow myosins. Immunocytochemistry reveals a cellular heterogeneity at all stages examined. Different combinations of myosin isozymes can be found in the soleus fibers depending on the stage of development; these results suggest therefore that myosin isozyme transitions are occurring. Approximately half the fibers contain embryonic and slow myosin at 1 week after birth; these fibers subsequently contain only slow myosin. A second group of fibers contains embryonic and neonatal myosin at 1 week and most of them subsequently accumulate adult fast myosin. A portion of this latter group begins to acquire slow myosin from 4 weeks of age. These data are interpreted to suggest that a preprogrammed sequence of myosin isozymes is embryonic----neonatal----adult fast. At any time during development of an individual fiber, induction of slow myosin accumulation and repression of other types can occur.  相似文献   

20.
The local anaesthetic (Bupivacaine (1-n-butyl-DL-piperidine-2-carboxylic acid-2, 6-dimethyl anilide hydrochloride) has been used to induce myofiber damage (and thus satellite cells proliferation) and thereby represents a tool for increasing the yield of myoblasts from adult muscles. Replicating satellite cells were isolated by enzymatic dissociation from soleus (slow type) and tibialis anterior (fast type) muscles of adult rats, and categorized by the isoform (embryonic, fast and slow) of myosin heavy chain (MHC) expressed following myotube formation in a similar in vitro environment. According to light microscopic criteria, no morphological differences exist between the satellite cell cultures obtained from adult fast and slow muscles after Bupivacaine injection. On the other hand the derived myotubes express, beside the embryonic type, the peculiar myosin heavy chains which characterize the myosin pattern of the donor muscles.  相似文献   

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