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1.
During muscle atrophy, myofibrillar proteins are degraded in an ordered process in which MuRF1 catalyzes ubiquitylation of thick filament components (Cohen et al. 2009. J. Cell Biol. http://dx.doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200901052). Here, we show that another ubiquitin ligase, Trim32, ubiquitylates thin filament (actin, tropomyosin, troponins) and Z-band (α-actinin) components and promotes their degradation. Down-regulation of Trim32 during fasting reduced fiber atrophy and the rapid loss of thin filaments. Desmin filaments were proposed to maintain the integrity of thin filaments. Accordingly, we find that the rapid destruction of thin filament proteins upon fasting was accompanied by increased phosphorylation of desmin filaments, which promoted desmin ubiquitylation by Trim32 and degradation. Reducing Trim32 levels prevented the loss of both desmin and thin filament proteins. Furthermore, overexpression of an inhibitor of desmin polymerization induced disassembly of desmin filaments and destruction of thin filament components. Thus, during fasting, desmin phosphorylation increases and enhances Trim32-mediated degradation of the desmin cytoskeleton, which appears to facilitate the breakdown of Z-bands and thin filaments.  相似文献   

2.
The association of desmin, a 55,000-dalton intermediate-filament protein, with the developing cardiac myofibril was studied by immunocytochemical methods in primary cultured myocytes isolated from embyronic rat hearts at different ages. In the earliest contractile myocytes obtained from 10-day-old embryonic hearts, desmin exists as an extensive cytoskeletal network with little or no association with the myofibrils. As the heart develops the cytoskeletal desmin undergoes the myofibrils. Initially, the cytoskeletal desmin appears to outline the developing myofibril as short, discontinuous filaments. At intermediate stages of heart development, desmin filaments in 12- to 16-day-old embryonic myocytes continue to outline the forming myofibrils. Associated with these filaments are crossbridges and foci of desmin spaced at a frequency equal to that of the Z-line spacing. Desmin becomes progressively associated with the myofibril from the central region of the cell toward the cell margin. Desmin filaments at this stage begin to coalesce in the region of the intercalated disk. In the early neonatal heart, desmin of the Z lines becomes continuous across the sarcomere and appears to integrate the myofibrils into a unit. These observations suggest that desmin is not required in the early stages of mammalian heart development for the initial assembly of cardiac sarcomeres or the initiation of cardiac myofibrillar contractions. In later stages of mammalian heart development, desmin is found associated with the cardiac myofibrils in such a manner as to stably integrate these elements into the cytoplasm. Additionally, desmin, in the Z lines of the more mature myocytes appears to maintain the myofibrils in close registry to each other and to the intercalated disk.  相似文献   

3.
Desmin and vimentin coexist at the periphery of the myofibril Z disc.   总被引:61,自引:0,他引:61  
B L Granger  E Lazarides 《Cell》1979,18(4):1053-1063
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis has revealed that vimentin, the predominant subunit of intermediate filaments in cells of mesenchymal origin, is a component of isolated skeletal myofibrils. It thus coexists in mature muscle fibers with desmin, the major subunit of muscle intermediate filaments. Antisera to desmin and vimentin, shown to be specific for their respective antigens by two-dimensional immunoautoradiography, have been used in immunofluorescence to demonstrate that vimentin has the same distribution as desmin in skeletal muscle. Both desmin and vimentin surround each myofibril Z disc and form honeycomb-like networks within each Z plane of the muscle fiber. This distribution is complementary to that of alpha-actinin within a given Z plane. Desmin and vimentin may thus be involved in maintaining the lateral registration of sarcomeres by transversely linking adjacent myofibrils at their Z discs. This linkage would support and integrate the fiber as a whole, and provide a molecular basis for the cross-striated appearance of skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

4.
The cardiomyopathic (CM) Syrian golden hamster (strain UM-X7.1) exhibits a hereditary cardiomyopathy, which causes premature death resulting from congestive heart failure. The CM animals show extensive cardiac myofibril disarray and myocardial calcium overload. The present study has been undertaken to examine the role of desmin phosphorylation in myofibril disarray observed in CM hearts. The data from skinned myofibril protein phosphorylation assays have shown that desmin can be phosphorylated by protein kinase C (PKC). There is no significant difference in the content of desmin between CM and control hamster hearts. However, the desmin from CM hearts has a higher phosphorylation level than that of the normal hearts. Furthermore, we have examined the distribution of desmin and myofibril organization with immunofluorescent microscopy and immunogold electron microscopy in cultured cardiac myocytes after treatment with the PKC-activating phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). When the cultured normal hamster cardiac cells are treated with TPA, desmin filaments are disassembled and the myofibrils become disarrayed. The myofibril disarray closely mimics that observed in untreated CM cultures. These results suggest that disassembly of desmin filaments, which could be caused by PKC-mediated phosphorylation, may be a factor in myofibril disarray in cardiomyopathic cells and that the intermediate filament protein, desmin, plays an important role in maintaining myofibril alignment in cardiac cells.  相似文献   

5.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,134(5):1255-1270
Desmin, the muscle specific intermediate filament (IF) protein encoded by a single gene, is expressed in all muscle tissues. In mature striated muscle, desmin IFs surround the Z-discs, interlink them together and integrate the contractile apparatus with the sarcolemma and the nucleus. To investigate the function of desmin in all three muscle types in vivo, we generated desmin null mice through homologous recombination. Surprisingly, desmin null mice are viable and fertile. However, these mice demonstrated a multisystem disorder involving cardiac, skeletal, and smooth muscle. Histological and electron microscopic analysis in both heart and skeletal muscle tissues revealed severe disruption of muscle architecture and degeneration. Structural abnormalities included loss of lateral alignment of myofibrils and abnormal mitochondrial organization. The consequences of these abnormalities were most severe in the heart, which exhibited progressive degeneration and necrosis of the myocardium accompanied by extensive calcification. Abnormalities of smooth muscle included hypoplasia and degeneration. The present data demonstrate the essential role of desmin in the maintenance of myofibril, myofiber, and whole muscle tissue structural and functional integrity, and show that the absence of desmin leads to muscle degeneration.  相似文献   

6.
Loss of myofibrillar proteins is a hallmark of atrophying muscle. Expression of muscle RING-finger 1 (MuRF1), a ubiquitin ligase, is markedly induced during atrophy, and MuRF1 deletion attenuates muscle wasting. We generated mice expressing a Ring-deletion mutant MuRF1, which binds but cannot ubiquitylate substrates. Mass spectrometry of the bound proteins in denervated muscle identified many myofibrillar components. Upon denervation or fasting, atrophying muscles show a loss of myosin-binding protein C (MyBP-C) and myosin light chains 1 and 2 (MyLC1 and MyLC2) from the myofibril, before any measurable decrease in myosin heavy chain (MyHC). Their selective loss requires MuRF1. MyHC is protected from ubiquitylation in myofibrils by associated proteins, but eventually undergoes MuRF1-dependent degradation. In contrast, MuRF1 ubiquitylates MyBP-C, MyLC1, and MyLC2, even in myofibrils. Because these proteins stabilize the thick filament, their selective ubiquitylation may facilitate thick filament disassembly. However, the thin filament components decreased by a mechanism not requiring MuRF1.  相似文献   

7.
Role of desmin filaments in chicken cardiac myofibrillogenesis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Desmin filaments are muscle-specific intermediate filaments located at the periphery of the Z-discs, and they have been postulated to play a critical role in the lateral registration of myofibrils. Previous studies suggest that intermediate filaments may be involved in titin assembly during the early stages of myofibrillogenesis. In order to investigate the putative function of desmin filaments in myofibrillogenesis, rabbit anti-desmin antibodies were introduced into cultured cardiomyocytes by electroporation to perturb the normal function of desmin filaments. Changes in the assembly of several sarcomeric proteins were examined by immunofluorescence. In cardiomyocytes incorporated with normal rabbit serum, staining for alpha-actinin and muscle actin displayed the typical Z-line and I-band patterns, respectively, while staining for titin with monoclonal anti-titin A12 antibody, which labels a titin epitope at the A-I junction, showed the periodic doublet staining pattern. Staining for C-protein gave an amorphous pattern in early cultures and identified A-band doublets in older cultures. In contrast, in cardiomyocytes incorporated with anti-desmin antibodies, alpha-actinin was found in disoriented Z-discs and the myofibrils became fragmented, forming mini-sarcomeres. In addition, titin was not organized into the typical A-band doublet, but appeared to be aggregated. Muscle actin staining was especially weak and appeared in tiny clusters. Moreover, in all ages of cardiomyocytes tested, C-protein remained in the disassembled form. The present data suggest the essential role of desmin in myofibril assembly.  相似文献   

8.
E Lazarides  D R Balzer 《Cell》1978,14(2):429-438
The extent of invariance and heterogeneity in desmin, the major component of the muscle form of 100 Å filaments, has been investigated in avian and mammalian muscle and nonmuscle cells with two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and indirect immunofluorescence. Desmin from chick, duck and quail, smooth, skeletal and cardiac muscle cells is resolved into two isoelectric variants, α and β, with each possessing the same charge and electrophoretic mobility in all three avian species irrespective of muscle type. Guinea pig and rat muscle desmin resolves into only one variant; it also possesses the same charge and electrophoretic mobility in the two mammalian species, but it is more acidic and slower in electrophoretic mobility than the two avian variants.In immunofluorescence, desmin is localized together with α-actinin along myofibril Z lines. Antibodies to chick smooth muscle desmin, prepared against the protein purified by preparative SDS gel electrophoresis prior to immunization, cross-react with myofibril Z lines in all three avian species. These antibodies do not cross-react with either rat or guinea pig myofibril Z lines. Similarly, they do not cross-react with avian or mammalian nonmuscle cells grown in tissue culture and known to contain cytoplasmic 100 Å filaments.These results demonstrate that desmin is highly conserved within avian muscle cells and within mammalian muscle cells. It is, however, both biochemically and immunologically distinguishable between avian and mammalian muscle cells, and between muscle and nonmuscle cells. We conclude that there are biochemically and immunologically specific forms of desmin for avian and mammalian muscle cells. Furthermore, within a particular vertebrate species, there are at least two separate classes of 100 Å filaments: the muscle class whose major component is desmin, and the nonmuscle class whose major component is distinct from desmin. Taking into consideration the immunological specificity reported by other laboratories for the 100 Å filaments in glial cells, for neurofilaments and for the epidermal 80 Å keratin filaments, we propose that a given vertebrate species contains at least four major distinguishable classes of 100 Å filaments: muscle 100 Å filaments (desmin filaments), glial filaments, neurofilaments and epidermal keratin filaments.  相似文献   

9.
Myofibrils are linked to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions located at the ends of muscle fibers, and at costameres, sites positioned periodically along lateral surfaces of muscle cells. Both of these sites are enriched in proteins that link active components of myofibrils to the cell membrane. Costameres are also enriched in desmin intermediate filaments that link passive components of myofibrils to the lateral surfaces of muscle cells. In this study, the possibility that desmin is also found between the terminal Z-disk of myofibrils and the myotendinous junction membrane is examined by immunocytochemistry and by KI-extraction procedures. Data presented show that desmin is located in the filamentous core of cellular processes at myotendinous junctions at sites 30 nm or more from the membrane. This core lies deep to subsarcolemmal material previously shown to contain talin, vinculin, and dystrophin. The distance from desmin to the membrane suggests desmin does not interact directly with membrane proteins at the junction. Immunoblots and indirect immunofluorescence of junctional regions of muscle compared to nonjunctional regions show no apparent enrichment of desmin at junctional sites, although vinculin, another costameric and junctional component, is significantly enriched at junctional regions. These findings show that passive elements of myofibrils may be continuous from myotendinous junctions of muscle origin to insertion via desmin filaments located between terminal Z-disks and the junctional membrane. This can provide a system in parallel to that involving thin filaments, vinculin, and talin for linking myofibrils to the cell membrane at myotendinous junctions.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The three-dimensional organization of cytoskeletal filaments associated with the myofibrils and sarcolemma of the myocardial cells of early chick embryos was studied by the rapid-freeze deep-etch method combined with immunocytochemistry. In the endoplasmic region of saponin-treated myocardial cells, 12–14 nm filaments formed a loose network surrounding nascent myofibrils. These 12–14 nm filaments attached to the myofibrils and some of them converged into Z disc regions. In the non-junctional cytocortical region thinner 8–11 nm filaments composed a dense network just beneath the sarcolemma. In myofibril terminating regions at the sarcolemma, i.e., the fascia adherens, 3–5 nm cross-bridges were observed among the thin filaments. In Triton-permeabilized and myosin subfragment 1 (S1)-treated samples, subsarcolemmal 8–11 nm filaments proved to be S1-decorated actin filaments under which there was a loose network of S1-undecorated filaments. Subsarcolemmal S1-decorated actin filaments had mixed polarity and attached to the sarcolemma at one end. A loose network of S1-undecorated filaments among myofibrils in the endoplasmic region was revealed to consist of desmin-containing intermediate filaments after immuno-gold staining for desmin. These networks connecting myofibrils with sarcolemma were assumed to play an important role in integrating and transmitting the contractile force of individual myofibrils within early embryonic myocardial cells.  相似文献   

11.
Crayfish muscle, like muscles from some other invertebrates, can supercontract. This muscle shortening is characterized by an overlap of thin filaments with crossing of thick filaments through the Z discs. In intact muscle cells, supercontraction does not seem to induce irreversible structural modifications in the tissue. Isolated crayfish myofibrils in the relaxed state cannot be distinguished from vertebrate myofibrils under light microscope, either by phase contrast or by immunofluorescence, with antiactin antibodies, actin being localized in the I bands. However, when isolated crayfish myofibrils are supercontracted, irreversible dammage occurs, most thin filaments being lost. Actin becomes then hardly detectable, being visible, by immunofluorescence, either in the Z discs or evenly distributed in the whole myofibril. During myofibril supercontraction, high amounts of denatured actin, become soluble as shown by SDS-PAGE, by double immunodiffusion, and by DNAse inhibition.  相似文献   

12.
Tropomodulin (Tmod) is an actin pointed-end capping protein that regulates actin dynamics at thin filament pointed ends in striated muscle. Although pointed-end capping by Tmod controls thin filament lengths in assembled myofibrils, its role in length specification during de novo myofibril assembly is not established. We used the Drosophila Tmod homologue, sanpodo (spdo), to investigate Tmod's function during muscle development in the indirect flight muscle. SPDO was associated with the pointed ends of elongating thin filaments throughout myofibril assembly. Transient overexpression of SPDO during myofibril assembly irreversibly arrested elongation of preexisting thin filaments. However, the lengths of thin filaments assembled after SPDO levels had declined were normal. Flies with a preponderance of abnormally short thin filaments were unable to fly. We conclude that: (a) thin filaments elongate from their pointed ends during myofibril assembly; (b) pointed ends are dynamically capped at endogenous levels of SPDO so as to allow elongation; (c) a transient increase in SPDO levels during myofibril assembly converts SPDO from a dynamic to a permanent cap; and (d) developmental regulation of pointed-end capping during myofibril assembly is crucial for specification of final thin filament lengths, myofibril structure, and muscle function.  相似文献   

13.
Thick and thin filaments in asynchronous flight muscle overlap nearly completely and thick filaments are attached to the Z-disc by connecting filaments. We have raised antibodies against a fraction of Lethocerus flight muscle myofibrils containing Z-discs and associated filaments and also against a low ionic strength extract of myofibrils. Monoclonal antibodies were obtained to proteins of 800 kd (p800), 700 kd (p700), 400 kd (p400) and alpha-actinin. The positions of the proteins in Lethocerus flight and leg myofibrils were determined by immunofluorescence and electron microscopy. p800 is in connecting filaments of flight myofibrils and in A-bands of leg myofibrils. p700 is in Z-discs of flight myofibrils and an immunologically related protein, p500, is in leg muscle Z-discs. p400 is in M-lines of both flight and leg myofibrils. Preliminary DNA sequencing shows that p800 is related to vertebrate titin and nematode twitchin. Molecules of p800 could extend from the Z-disc a short way along thick filaments, forming a mechanical link between the two structures. All three high molecular weight proteins probably stabilize the structure of the myofibril.  相似文献   

14.
The high molecular weight actin-binding protein filamin is located at the periphery of the Z disk in the fast adult chicken pectoral muscle (Gomer, R. H., and E. Lazarides, 1981, Cell, 23: 524-532). In contrast, we have found that in the slow anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle, filamin was additionally located throughout the l band as judged by immunofluorescence with affinity-purified antibodies on myofibrils and cryosections. The Z line proteins desmin and alpha-actinin, however, had the same distribution in ALD as they do in pectoral muscle. Quantitation of filamin and actin from the two muscle types showed that there was approximately 10 times as much filamin per actin in ALD myofibrils as in pectoral myofibrils. Filamin immunoprecipitated from ALD had an electrophoretic mobility in SDS polyacrylamide gels identical to that of pectoral myofibril filamin and slightly greater than that of chicken gizzard filamin. Two-dimensional peptide maps of filamin immunoprecipitated and labeled with 125I showed that ALD myofibril filamin was virtually identical to pectoral myofibril filamin and was distinct from chicken gizzard filamin.  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.
《Biophysical journal》2020,118(8):1921-1929
It has been accepted that the force produced by a skeletal muscle myofibril depends on its cross-sectional area but not on the number of active sarcomeres because they are arranged in series. However, a previous study performed by our group showed that blocking actomyosin interactions within an activated myofibril and depleting the thick filaments in one sarcomere unexpectedly reduced force production. In this study, we examined in detail how consecutive depletion of thick filaments in individual sarcomeres within a myofibril affects force production. Myofibrils isolated from rabbit psoas were activated and relaxed using a perfusion system. An extra microperfusion needle filled with a high-ionic strength solution was used to erase thick filaments in individual sarcomeres in real time before myofibril activation. The isometric forces were measured upon activation. The force produced by myofibrils with intact sarcomeres was significantly higher than the force produced by myofibrils with one or more sarcomeres lacking thick filaments (p < 0.0001) irrespective of the number of contractions imposed on the myofibrils and their initial sarcomere length. Our results suggest that the myofibril force is affected by intersarcomere dynamics and the number of active sarcomeres in series.  相似文献   

17.
The mechanisms of myofibril growth proliferation were investigated in the red and white muscles of fish. In both types of muscle the ratio of lattice filament spacings between the Z disk and M line was found to be greater than that required for perfect transformation of a square into a hexagonal lattice. This mismatch was considered to result in the thin filaments being pulled obliquely instead of at right angles to the Z disk. The angle of pull of the thin filaments was measured in longitudinal sections. The splitting process was found to decrease the degree of pull. Splitting was also observed in transverse sections of the peripheral myofibrils. In both red and white fibres these myofibrils were found to commence splitting when they reached a size of approximately 1-2 mum diameter. Evidence from ultrastructural and autoradiographical studies suggested that growth of the myofibrils within the fibres is centrifugal. The outermost myofibrils appear to be the ones which are being built up and which split. The data indicated that in fish muscle a considerable number of filaments may be added to the daughter regions whilst splitting of the myofibril is still continuing.  相似文献   

18.
Obscurin is a newly identified giant muscle protein whose functions remain to be elucidated. In this study we used high-resolution confocal microscopy to examine the dynamics of obscurin localization in cultures of rat cardiac myocytes during the assembly and disassembly of myofibrils. Double immunolabeling of neonatal and adult rat cells for obscurin and sarcomeric alpha-actinin, the major protein of Z-lines, demonstrated that, during myofibrillogenesis, obscurin is intensely incorporated into M-band areas of A-bands and, to a lesser extent, in Z-lines of newly formed sarcomeres. Presarcomeric structural precursors of myofibrils were intensely immunopositive for alpha-actinin and, unlike mature myofibrils, weakly immunopositive or immunonegative for obscurin. This indicates that most of the obscurin assembles in developing myofibrils after abundant incorporation of alpha-actinin and that massive integration of obscurin occurs at more advanced stages of sarcomere assembly. Immunoreactivity for obscurin in the middle of A-bands and in Z-lines of sarcomeres bridged the gaps between individual bundles of newly formed myofibrils, suggesting that this protein appears to be directly involved in their primary lateral connection and registered alignment into larger clusters. Close sarcomeric localization of obscurin and titin suggests that they may interact during myofibril assembly. Interestingly, the laterally aligned striated pattern of obscurin formed at a stage when desmin, traditionally considered as a molecular linker responsible for the lateral binding and stabilization of myofibrils at the Z-bands, was still diffusely localized. During the disassembly of the contractile system in adult myocytes, disappearance of the cross-striated pattern of obscurin preceded the disorganization of registered alignment and intense breakdown of myofibrils. The cross-striated pattern of desmin typical of terminally differentiated myocytes disappeared before or simultaneously with obscurin. During redifferentiation, as in neonatal myocytes, sarcomeric incorporation of obscurin closely followed that of alpha-actinin and occurred earlier than the striated arrangement of desmin intermediate filaments. The presence of obscurin in the Z-lines and its later assembly into the A/M-bands indicate that it may serve to stabilize and align sarcomeric structure when myosin filaments are incorporated. Our data suggest that obscurin, interacting with other muscle proteins and possibly with the sarcoplasmic reticulum, may have a role as a flexible structural integrator of myofibrils during assembly and adaptive remodeling of the contractile apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
Cytoskeletal intermediate filaments were studied in muscular dysgenesis (mdg) and tetrodotoxin-treated inactive mouse embryo muscle cultures during myofibrillogenesis. Both muscular dysgenesis and tetrodotoxin-treated muscles are characterized in vitro by a total lack of contractile activity and an abnormal development of myofibrils. We studied the organization of the microtubule and intermediate filament networks with immunofluorescence, using anti-tubulin, anti-vimentin, and anti-desmin antibodies during normal and mdg/mdg myogenesis in vitro. Mdg/mdg myotubes present a heterogeneous microtubule network with scattered areas of decreased microtubule density. At the myoblast stage, cells expressed both vimentin and desmin. After fusion only desmin expression is revealed. In mutant myotubes the desmin network remains in a diffuse position and does not reorganize itself transversely, as it does during normal myogenesis. The absence of a mature organization of the desmin network in mdg/mdg myotubes is accompanied by a lack of organization of myofibrils. The role of muscle activity in the organization of myofibrils and desmin filaments was tested in two ways: (i) mdg/mdg myotubes were rendered active by coculturing with normal spinal cord cells, and (ii) normal myotubes were treated with tetrodotoxin (TTX) to suppress contractions. Mdg/mdg innervated myotubes showed cross-striated myofibrils, whereas desmin filaments remained diffuse. TTX-treated myotubes possessed disorganized myofibrils and a very unusual pattern of distribution of desmin: intensively stained desmin aggregates were superimposed upon the diffuse network. We conclude, on the basis of these results, that myofibrillar organization does not directly involve intermediate filaments but does need contractile activity.  相似文献   

20.
The objective of this study was to investigate the potential role of the caspase protease family in meat tenderisation by examining if caspase 3 was capable of causing myofibril protein degradation. Full-length human recombinant caspase 3 (rC3) was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The rC3 was active in the presence of myofibrils isolated from porcine longissimus dorsi muscle (LD) and retained activity in a buffer system closely mimicking post mortem conditions. The effect of increasing concentrations of rC3, incubation temperature, as well as incubation time on the degradation of isolated myofibril proteins were all investigated in this study. Myofibril protein degradation was determined by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting. There was a visible increase in myofibril degradation with a decrease in proteins identified as desmin and troponin I and the detection of protein degradation products at approximately 32, 28 and 18 kDa with increasing concentrations of rC3. These degradation products were analysed using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and identified to occur from the proteolysis of actin, troponin T and myosin light chain, respectively. The production of these degradation products was not inhibited by 5 mM EDTA or semi-purified calpastatin but was inhibited by the caspase-specific inhibitor Ac-DEVD-CHO. The temperature at which isolated myofibrils were incubated with rC3 was also found to affect degradation, with increasing incubation temperatures causing increased desmin degradation and cleavage of pro-caspase 3 into its active isoform. Incubation of isolated myofibrils at 4°C for 5 days with rC3 resulted in the visible degradation of a number of myofibril proteins including desmin and troponin I. This study has shown that rC3 is capable of causing myofibril degradation, hydrolysing myofibril proteins under conditions that are similar to those found in muscle in the post mortem conditioning period.  相似文献   

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