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1.
2.
Development of chicken breast muscle is characterized by the sequential appearance of six electrophoretically distinct myosin heavy chain (HC) isoforms. Cultured secondary myotubes, derived from 12-day embryonic chick breast muscle, mainly express the early embryonic HC isoform HCemb/e, normally present in 8-day embryonic breast muscle, and the two fast light chain isoforms LC1f and LC2f. Direct low-frequency (2.5 Hz) stimulation of these myotubes via platinum electrodes leads to a shift in myosin HC expression with increases in the late embryonic HC isoform HCemb/l amounting to 35% of total HC in 19-day-stimulated cultures. Measurements of 35S-methionine incorporation and immunohistochemical analyses demonstrate increases in LC3f. This increase is also seen at the mRNA level. These results indicate that induced contractile activity promotes myotube maturation in vitro. The observation that chronic stimulation enhances the expression of the slow isoform LC2s at the RNA, as well as the protein level, suggests an additional effect consisting of a fast-to-slow change in phenotype expression. In view of the fact that muscle maturation and phenotype expression is under neural control during development in vivo, our results on directly stimulated, aneural myotubes indicate that neurally transmitted contractile activity may be an important factor in modulating phenotype expression of secondary myotubes.  相似文献   

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4.
We show that a single myogenic progenitor cell in vitro generates two types of myoblasts committed to two distinct myogenic cell lineages. Using fast and slow myosin heavy chain isoform content to define myotube type, we found that myogenic cells from fetal quail (day 10 in ovo) formed two types of myotubes in vitro: fast and mixed fast/slow. Clonal analysis showed that these two types of myotubes were formed from two types of myoblasts committed to distinct fast and fast/slow lineages. Serial subcloning demonstrated that the initial myoblast progeny of an individual myogenic progenitor cell were in the fast lineage, whereas later progeny were in the fast/slow lineage. Fast and slow myosin expression within particular myotubes reflects the genetic processes underlying myoblast commitment to diverse myogenic lineages.  相似文献   

5.
J Kucera  J M Walro 《Histochemistry》1990,93(6):567-580
The expression of several isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC) by intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of the rat soleus muscle at different stages of development was compared by immunocytochemistry. The first intrafusal myotube to form, the bag2 fiber, expressed a slow-twitch MHC isoform identical to that expressed by the primary extrafusal myotubes. The second intrafusal myotube to form, the bag1 fiber, expressed a fast-twitch MHC similar to that initially expressed by the secondary extrafusal myotubes. At subsequent stages of development, the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions of bag2 and bag1 intrafusal myofibers began to express a slow-tonic myosin isoform not expressed by extrafusal fibers, and ceased to express some of the MHC isoforms present initially. Myotubes which eventually matured into chain fibers expressed initially both the slow-twitch and fast-twitch MHC isoforms similar to some secondary extrafusal myotubes. In contrast, adult chain fibers expressed the fast-twitch MHC isoform only. Hence intrafusal myotubes initially expressed no unique MHCs, but rather expressed MHCs similar to those expressed by extrafusal myotubes at the same chronological stage of muscle development. These observations suggest that both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers develop from common pools of bipotential myotubes. Differences in MHC expression observed between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of rat muscle might then result from a morphogenetic effect of afferent innervation on intrafusal myotubes.  相似文献   

6.
《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   

7.
Myosin heavy chain (MHC) is encoded by a multigene family containing members which are expressed in developmental and fiber type-specific patterns. In developing rats, primary (1°) and secondary (2°) myotjbes can be disfinguished by differences in MHC expression: 1° myotubes coexpress embryonic and slow MHC, while 2° myotubes initially express only embryonic MHC. We have used monoclonal antibodies which recognize the embryonic, slow, neonatal, and adult fast IIB/IIX MHCs to examine MHC accumulation in myoblasts obtained from hindlimbs of embryonic day (ED) 14 and ED 20 Sprague-Dawley rats during differentiation in vitro. Embryonic myoblasts (ED 14), which develop into 1° myotubes in vivo, differentiate as myocytes or small myotubes (i.e., 1–4 nuclei) which express both embryonic and slow MHC. They do not accumulate detectable levels of neonatal or adult fast IIB/IIX MHC. Fetal myoblasts, which develop into secondary myotubes in vivo, fuse to form large myotubes (i.e., 10–50 nuclei) and express predominantly embryonic MHC at 3 days in culture. These myotubes accumulate neonatal and adult fast IIB/IIX isoforms of MHC and eventually contract spontaneously. In contrast to embryonic myotubes, they do not accumulate slow MHC. Our results demonstrate that embryonic and fetal rat myoblasts express different phenotypes in vitro and suggest that they represent distinct myoblast lineages similar to those previously described in chickens and mice. These two lineages may be responsible for the generation of distinct populations of 1° and 2° myotubes in vivo. © 1993Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
The expression of fast and slow isoforms of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase was studied in the developing chick embryo and in tissue-cultured myotubes. Monoclonal antibodies specific for each isoform were used as probes of protein expression. Analysis of expression of Ca2+-ATPase isoforms in chick thigh muscles by immunofluorescence microscopy revealed that all muscle fibers expressed both isoforms during their development. Primary generation muscle fibers expressed predominantly the slow isoform. Secondary generation fibers expressed both isoforms at comparable levels. Loss of the "inappropriate" isoforms occurred late in embryonic development. Immunoblot analysis of embryonic thigh muscle proteins indicated that the expression of the slow isoform varied little from embryonic Day 6 (ED6) to ED19, while expression of the fast isoform increased dramatically just prior to ED19. Tissue-cultured myotubes derived from ED12 chick thigh muscle myoblasts, plated at high density, expressed both isoforms of the Ca2+-ATPase at very similar levels. Clonal analysis of myoblasts taken from early (ED6) and late (ED12) chick thigh muscles showed that all muscle colonies expressed both forms, consistent with in vivo results. Fiber-type specific isoforms of the Ca2+-ATPase and myosin heavy chain are not coordinately expressed in developing chick skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The expression of several isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MHC) by intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of the rat soleus muscle at different stages of development was compared by immunocytochemistry. The first intrafusal myotube to form, the bag2 fiber, expressed a slow-twitch MHC isoform identical to that expressed by the primary extrafusal myotubes. The second intrafusal myotube to form, the bag1 fiber, expressed a fast-twitch MHC similar to that initially expressed by the secondary extrafusal myotubes. At subsequent stages of development, the equatorial and juxtaequatorial regions of bag2 and bag1 intrafusal myofibers began to express a slow-tonic myosin isoform not expressed by extrafusal fibers, and ceased to express some of the MHC isoforms present initially. Myotubes which eventually matured into chain fibers expressed initially both the slow-twitch and fast-twitch MHC isoforms similar to some secondary extrafusal myotubes. In contrast, adult chain fibers expressed the fast-twitch MHC isoform only. Hence intrafusal myotubes initially expressed no unique MHCs, but rather expressed MHCs similar to those expressed by extrafusal myotubes at the same chronological stage of muscle development. These observations suggest that both intrafusal and extrafusal fibers develop from common pools of bipotential myotubes. Differences in MHC expression observed between intrafusal and extrafusal fibers of rat muscle might then result from a morphogenetic effect of afferent innervation on intrafusal myotubes.  相似文献   

10.
During chicken skeletal myogenesis in vitro, the actin-binding protein filamin is present at first in association with actin filament bundles both in myoblasts and in myotubes early after fusion. Later in mature myotubes it is found in association with myofibril Z disks. These two associations of filamin are separated by a period of several days, during which the protein is absent from the cytoplasm of differentiating myotubes (Gomer, R., and E. Lazarides, 1981, Cell, 23:524-532). To characterize the two classes of filamin polypeptides we have compared, by two-dimensional peptide mapping, 125I-labeled filamin immunoprecipitated from myoblasts and fibroblasts to filamin immunoprecipitated from mature myotubes and adult skeletal myofibrils. Myoblast filamin is highly homologous to fibroblast and purified chicken gizzard filamins. Mature myotube and adult myofibril filamins are highly homologous but exhibit extensive peptide differences with respect to the other three classes of filamin. Comparison of peptide maps from immunoprecipitated 35S-methionine-labeled filamins also shows that fibroblast and myoblast filamins are highly homologous but show substantial peptide differences with respect to mature myotube filamin. Filamins from both mature myotubes and skeletal myofibrils exhibit a slightly higher electrophoretic mobility than gizzard, fibroblast, and myoblast filamins. Short pulse-labeling studies show that mature myotube filamin is synthesized as a lower molecular weight variant and is not derived from a higher molecular weight precursor. These results suggest that myoblast and mature myotube filamins are distinct gene products and that during skeletal myogenesis in vitro one class of filamin polypeptides is replaced by a new class of filamin polypeptides, and that the latter is maintained into adulthood.  相似文献   

11.
Striated muscle contraction is powered by actin-activated myosin ATPase. This process is regulated by Ca(2+) via the troponin complex. Slow- and fast-twitch fibers of vertebrate skeletal muscle express type I and type II myosin, respectively, and these myosin isoenzymes confer different ATPase activities, contractile velocities, and force. Skeletal muscle troponin has also diverged into fast and slow isoforms, but their functional significance is not fully understood. To investigate the expression of troponin isoforms in mammalian skeletal muscle and their functional relationship to that of the myosin isoforms, we concomitantly studied myosin, troponin T (TnT), and troponin I (TnI) isoform contents and isometric contractile properties in single fibers of rat skeletal muscle. We characterized a large number of Triton X-100-skinned single fibers from soleus, diaphragm, gastrocnemius, and extensor digitorum longus muscles and selected fibers with combinations of a single myosin isoform and a single class (slow or fast) of the TnT and TnI isoforms to investigate their role in determining contractility. Types IIa, IIx, and IIb myosin fibers produced higher isometric force than that of type I fibers. Despite the polyploidy of adult skeletal muscle fibers, the expression of fast or slow isoforms of TnT and TnI is tightly coupled. Fibers containing slow troponin had higher Ca(2+) sensitivity than that of the fast troponin fibers, whereas fibers containing fast troponin showed a higher cooperativity of Ca(2+) activation than that of the slow troponin fibers. These results demonstrate distinct but coordinated regulation of troponin and myosin isoform expression in skeletal muscle and their contribution to the contractile properties of muscle.  相似文献   

12.
To assess the influence of paralysis on the expression of phenotypic protein isoforms related to muscle relaxation, the effects of spinal cord transection (ST) on sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) pump isoform protein levels in the slow rat soleus were measured. Western blotting using SERCA isoform specific antibodies demonstrated a rapid up-regulation (7 days post ST) of the fast fiber type-specific isoform (SERCA1). In contrast, the slow fiber type-specific isoform, SERCA2, was decreased with a slower time-course. The up-regulation of SERCA1 protein preceded the up-regulation of fast myosin heavy chain (MyHC) (i.e., MyHC-II). Immunohistochemical analyses of single muscle fibers showed that 15 days after ST there was a pronounced increase in the proportion of slow MyHC fibers with SERCA1 confirming that SERCA1 was up-regulated in the slow fibers of the soleus prior to MyHC-II. These data suggest that the expression of the SERCA isoforms (particularly SERCA1) may serve as more sensitive markers of phenotypic adaptation in response to altered levels of contractile activity than the MyHC isoforms. In addition, since the expression of SERCA isoforms was dissociated from MyHC isoforms, regulation of gene expression for these two different protein systems must involve different signaling events and/or synthetic processes.  相似文献   

13.
Weight-bearing skeletal muscles change phenotype in response to unloading. Using the hindlimb suspension rat model, we investigated the regulation of myofilament protein isoforms in correlation to contractility. Four weeks of continuous hindlimb unloading produced progressive atrophy and contractility changes in soleus but not extensor digitorum longus muscle. The unloaded soleus muscle also had decreased fatigue resistance. Along with the decrease of myosin heavy chain isoform I and IIa and increase of IIb and IIx, coordinated regulation of thin filament regulatory protein isoforms were observed: - and -tropomyosin decreased and -tropomyosin increased, resulting in an / ratio similar to that in normal fast twitch skeletal muscle; troponin I and troponin T (TnT) both showed decrease in the slow isoform and increases in the fast isoform. The TnT isoform switching began after 7 days of unloading and TnI isoform showed detectable changes at 14 days while other protein isoform changes were not significant until 28 days of treatment. Correlating to the early changes in contractility, especially the resistance to fatigue, the early response of TnT isoform regulation may play a unique role in the adaptation of skeletal muscle to unloading. When the fast TnT gene expression was upregulated in the unloaded soleus muscle, alternative RNA splicing switched to produce more high molecular weight acidic isoforms, reflecting a potential compensation for the decrease of slow TnT that is critical to skeletal muscle function. The results demonstrate that differential regulation of TnT isoforms is a sensitive mechanism in muscle adaptation to functional demands. troponin T; fatigue resistance; troponin I; tropomyosin; myosin; hindlimb-suspended rat; Western blot protein quantification  相似文献   

14.
We describe a simple culture method for obtaining highly differentiated clonal C2C12 myotubes using a feeder layer of confluent fibroblasts, and document the expression of contractile protein expression and aspects of myofibre morphology using this system. Traditional culture methods using collagen- or laminin-coated tissue-culture plastic typically results in a cyclic pattern of detachment and reformation of myotubes, rarely producing myotubes of a mature adult phenotype. C2C12 co-culture on a fibroblast substratum facilitates the sustained culture of contractile myotubes, resulting in a mature sarcomeric register with evidence for peripherally migrating nuclei. Immunoblot analysis demonstrates that desmin, tropomyosin, sarcomeric actin, alpha-actinin-2 and slow myosin are detected throughout myogenic differentiation, whereas adult fast myosin heavy chain isoforms, members of the dystrophin-associated complex, and alpha-actinin-3 are not expressed at significant levels until >6 days of differentiation, coincident with the onset of contractile activity. Electrical stimulation of mature myotubes reveals typical and reproducible calcium transients, demonstrating functional maturation with respect to calcium handling proteins. Immunocytochemical staining demonstrates a well-defined sarcomeric register throughout the majority of myotubes (70-80%) and a striated staining pattern is observed for desmin, indicating alignment of the intermediate filament network with the sarcomeric register. We report that culture volume affects the fusion index and rate of sarcomeric development in developing myotubes and propose that a fibroblast feeder layer provides an elastic substratum to support contractile activity and likely secretes growth factors and extracellular matrix proteins that assist myotube development.  相似文献   

15.
Postnatal myoblasts, the satellite cells, originating from slow and fast skeletal muscle fibres differentiate and fuse into myotubes expressing different phenotype of myosin heavy chain (MyHC) isoforms. Little is known, however, of factors which establish and maintain this phenotypic diversity. We used immunofluorescent labelling and Western blotting to examine the expression of slow and fast MyHC isoforms in myotubes formed in vitro from satellite cells isolated from mouse fast twitch extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and slow twitch soleus muscles. Satellite cells were cultured in serum-rich growth medium promoting myoblast proliferation until cross-striated and self-contracting myotubes were formed. We report that in both cultures myotubes expressed slow as well as fast MyHC isoforms, but the level of slow MyHC was higher in soleus culture than in EDL culture. Hence, the pattern of expression of slow and fast MyHC was characteristic of the muscle fibre type from which these cells derive. These results support the concept of phenotypic diversity among satellite cells in mature skeletal muscles and suggest that this diversity is generated in vitro irrespectively of serum mitogens.  相似文献   

16.
Skeletal myogenesis is a precise procedure marked by specific changes in muscle cell morphology and cytoarchitecture. Cessation of proliferation by skeletal muscle precursor cells (myoblasts) coincides with the induction of fusion to form multinucleated myotubes and the initiation of differentiation, the process through which sarcomeres are formed. Concurrently, there is a distinct upregulation in expression of muscle-specific isoforms and an extreme downregulation of non-muscle-specific cytoskeletal isoforms. The sarcomere is the contractile unit of the cell and is comprised of a number of different proteins aggregated and aligned in very ordered arrays along the myotube. It is this rigorously controlled alignment that gives striated muscle its characteristic "striped" appearance. Previous studies, conducted predominantly in cardiac muscle, propose models for the development of the sarcomere that attribute little of the differentiative process to the myoblast morphology and cytoskeletal arrangement. In this study, perturbation of myoblast morphology and cytoskeletal arrangement by transfection with nonmuscle actin genes in the mouse skeletal muscle cell line C2 resulted in myotubes of both varied morphology and sarcomeric structure. The results presented herein not only provide novel insights into the formation of the sarcomere in skeletal muscle, but also suggest a role for myoblast morphology and cytoskeletal structure in the subsequent differentiation of the myotube.  相似文献   

17.
Caveolin-3 is the principal structural protein of caveolae membrane domains in striated muscle cells. Caveolin-3 mRNA and protein expression are dramatically induced during the differentiation of C2C12 skeletal myoblasts, coincident with myoblast fusion. In these myotubes, caveolin-3 localizes to the sarcolemma (muscle cell plasma membrane), where it associates with the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex. However, it remains unknown what role caveolin-3 plays in myoblast differentiation and myotube formation. Here, we employ an antisense approach to derive stable C2C12 myoblasts that fail to express the caveolin-3 protein. We show that C2C12 cells harboring caveolin-3 antisense undergo differentiation and express normal amounts of four muscle-specific marker proteins. However, C2C12 cells harboring caveolin-3 antisense fail to undergo myoblast fusion and, therefore, do not form myotubes. Interestingly, treatment with specific p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitors blocks both myotube formation and caveolin-3 expression, but does not affect the expression of other muscle-specific proteins. In addition, we find that three human rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines do not express caveolin-3 and fail to undergo myoblast fusion. Taken together, these results support the idea that caveolin-3 expression is required for myoblast fusion and myotube formation, and suggest that p38 is an upstream regulator of caveolin-3 expression.  相似文献   

18.
The functionally undefined Stac3 gene, predicted to encode a SH3 domain- and C1 domain-containing protein, was recently found to be specifically expressed in skeletal muscle and essential to normal skeletal muscle development and contraction. In this study we determined the potential role of Stac3 in myoblast proliferation and differentiation, two important steps of muscle development. Neither siRNA-mediated Stac3 knockdown nor plasmid-mediated Stac3 overexpression affected the proliferation of C2C12 myoblasts. Stac3 knockdown promoted the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers including myogenin and myosin heavy chain. In contrast, Stac3 overexpression inhibited the differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts into myotubes as evidenced by decreased fusion index, decreased number of nuclei per myotube, and decreased mRNA and protein expression of myogenic markers. Compared to wild-type myoblasts, myoblasts from Stac3 knockout mouse embryos showed accelerated differentiation into myotubes in culture as evidenced by increased fusion index, increased number of nuclei per myotube, and increased mRNA expression of myogenic markers. Collectively, these data suggest an inhibitory role of endogenous Stac3 in myoblast differentiation. Myogenesis is a tightly controlled program; myofibers formed from prematurely differentiated myoblasts are dysfunctional. Thus, Stac3 may play a role in preventing precocious myoblast differentiation during skeletal muscle development.  相似文献   

19.
Vertebrate myosin heavy chains (MHC) are represented by multiple genes that are expressed in a spatially and temporally distinct pattern during development. In order to obtain molecular probes for developmentally regulated human MHC isoforms, we used monoclonal antibodies to screen an expression cDNA library constructed from primary human myotube cultures. A 3.4 kb cDNA was isolated that encodes one of the first MHCs to be transcribed in human skeletal muscle development. A portion of the corresponding gene encoding this isoform has also been isolated. Expression of this embryonic MHC is a hallmark of muscle regeneration after birth and is a characteristic marker of human muscular dystrophies. During normal human development, expression is restricted to the embryonic period of development prior to birth. In primary human muscle cell cultures, devoid of other cell types, mRNA accumulation begins as myotubes form, reaches a peak 2 days later and declines to undetectable levels within 10 days. The expression of the protein encoded by the embryonic skeletal MHC gene follows a similar time course, lagging behind the mRNA by approximately two days. Thus, expression of the human embryonic gene is efficiently induced and then repressed in cultured muscle cells, as it is in muscle tissue. The study of the regulation of a human MHC isoform with a central role in muscle development and in muscle regeneration in disease states is therefore amendable to analysis at a molecular level.  相似文献   

20.
When adult mouse muscle fibers are co-cultured with embryonic mouse spinal cord, the muscle regenerates to form myotubes that develop cross-striations and contractions. We have investigated the myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms present in these cultures using polyclonal antibodies to the neonatal, adult fast, and slow MHC isoforms of rat (all of which were shown to react specifically with the analogous mouse isoforms) in an immunocytochemical assay. The adult fast MHC was absent in newly formed myotubes but was found at later times, although it was absent when the myotubes myotubes were cultured without spinal cord tissue. When nerve-induced muscle contractions were blocked by the continuous presence of alpha-bungarotoxin, there was no decrease in the proportion of fibers that contained adult fast MHC. Neonatal and slow MHC were found at all times in culture, even in the absence of the spinal cord, and so their expression was not thought to be nerve-dependent. Thus, in this culture system, the expression of adult fast MHC required the presence of the spinal cord, but was probably not dependent upon nerve-induced contractile activity in the muscle fibers.  相似文献   

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