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1.
De novo assembly of myofibrils was investigated in explants of precardiac mesoderm from quail embryos to address a controversy about different models of myofibrillogenesis. The sequential expression of sarcomeric components was visualized in double- and triple-stained explants before, during, and just after the first cardiomyocytes began to beat. In explants from stage 6 embryos, cultured for 10 h, ectoderm, endoderm, and the precardiac mesoderm displayed arrays of stress fibers with alternating bands of the nonmuscle isoforms of alpha-actinin and myosin IIB. With increasing time in culture, mesoderm cells contained fibrils composed of actin, nonmuscle myosin IIB, and sarcomeric alpha-actinin. Several hours later, before beating occurred, both nonmuscle and muscle myosin II localized in some of the fibrils in the cells. Concentrations of muscle myosin began as thin bundles, dispersed in the cytoplasm, often overlapping one another, and progressed to small, aligned A-band-sized aggregates. The amount of nonmuscle myosin decreased dramatically when Z-bands formed, the muscle myosin became organized into A-bands, and the cells began beating. The sequential changes in protein composition of the fibrils in the developing muscle cells supports the model of myofibrillogenesis in which assembly begins with premyofibrils and progresses through nascent myofibrils to mature myofibrils.  相似文献   
2.
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   
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4.
Xu J  Gao J  Li J  Xue L  Clark KJ  Ekker SC  Du SJ 《遗传学报》2012,39(2):69-80
Myofibrillogenesis, the process of sarcomere formation, requires close interactions of sarcomeric proteins and various components of sarcomere structures. The myosin thick filaments and M-lines are two key components of the sarcomere. It has been suggested that myomesin proteins of M-lines interact with myosin and titin proteins and keep the thick and titin filaments in order. However, the function of myomesin in myofibrillogenesis and sarcomere organization remained largely enigmatic. No knockout or knockdown animal models have been reported to elucidate the role of myomesin in sarcomere organization in vivo. In this study, by using the gene-specific knockdown approach in zebrafish embryos, we carried out a loss-of-function analysis of myomesin-3 and slow myosin heavy chain 1 (smyhc1) expressed specifically in slow muscles. We demonstrated that knockdown of smyhc1 abolished the sarcomeric localization of myomesin-3 in slow muscles. In contrast, loss of myomesin-3 had no effect on the sarcomeric organization of thick and thin filaments as well as M- and Z-line structures. Together, these studies indicate that myosin thick filaments are required for M-line organization and M-line localization of myomesin-3. In contrast, myomesin-3 is dispensable for sarcomere organization in slow muscles.  相似文献   
5.
Myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation in skeletal and cardiac muscles modulates Ca(2+)-dependent troponin regulation of contraction. RLC is phosphorylated by a dedicated Ca(2+)-dependent myosin light chain kinase in fast skeletal muscle, where biochemical properties of RLC kinase and phosphatase converge to provide a biochemical memory for RLC phosphorylation and post-activation potentiation of force development. The recent identification of cardiac-specific myosin light chain kinase necessary for basal RLC phosphorylation and another potential RLC kinase (zipper-interacting protein kinase) provides opportunities for new approaches to study signaling pathways related to the physiological function of RLC phosphorylation and its importance in cardiac muscle disease.  相似文献   
6.
Striated muscle is a mechanical system that develops force and generates power in serving vital activities in the body. Striated muscle is a complex biological system; a single mammalian muscle fibre contains up to hundred or even more myofibrils in parallel connected via an inter-myofibril filament network. In one single myofibril thousands of sarcomeres are lined up as a series of linear motors. We recently demonstrated that half-sarcomeres (hS) in a single myofibril operate non-uniformly. We outline a mathematical framework based on cross-bridge kinetics for the simulation of the force response and length change of individual hS in a myofibril. The model describes the muscle myofibril in contraction experiments under various conditions. The myofibril is modeled as a multisegmental mechanical system of hS models, which have active and viscoelastic properties. In the first approach, a two-state cross-bridge formalism relates the hS force to the chemical kinetics of ATP hydrolysis, as first described by Huxley [1957. Muscle structure and theories of contraction. Prog. Biophys. Mol. Biol. 7, 255-318]. Two possible types of biological variability are introduced and modeled. Numerical simulations of a myofibril composed of four to eight hS show a non-uniform hS length distribution and complex internal dynamics upon activation. We demonstrate that the steady-state approximation holds only in restricted time zones during activation. Simulations of myofibril contraction experiments that reproduce the classic steady-state force-length and force-velocity relationships, strictly constrained or “clamped” in either end-held isometric or isotonic contraction conditions, reveal a small but conspicuous effect of hS dynamics on force.  相似文献   
7.
Various hypotheses have been proposed to explain the molecule processes of sarcomere assembly, partially due to the lack of systematic genetic studies of sarcomeric genes in an in vivo model. Towards the goal of developing zebrafish as a vertebrate model for this purpose, we characterized myofibrillogenesis in a developing zebrafish heart and went on to examine the functions of cardiac troponin T (tnnt2). We found that sarcomere assembly in zebrafish heart was initiated from a non-striated actin filament network at the perimembrane region, whereas sarcomeric myosin is independently assembled into thick filaments of variable length before integrating into the thin filament network. Compared to Z-discs that are initially aligned to form shorter periodic dots and expanded longitudinally at a later time, M-lines assemble later and have a constant length. Depletion of full-length tnnt2 disrupted the striation of thin filaments and Z-bodies, which sequentially affects the striation of thick filaments and M-lines. Conversely, truncation of a C-terminal troponin complex-binding domain did not affect the striation of these sarcomere sub-structures, but resulted in reduced cardiomyocyte size. In summary, our data indicates that zebrafish are a valuable in vivo model for studying both myofibrillogenesis and sarcomere-based cardiac diseases.  相似文献   
8.
The stiffness of the sarcomeres was studied during the diastolic interval of 18 stimulated (0.5 Hz) cardiac trabeculae of rat (pH 7.4; temperature = 25°C). Sarcomere length (SL) and force (F) were measured using, respectively, laser diffraction techniques (resolution: 4 nm) and a silicon strain gauge (resolution: 0.63 μN). Sinusoidal perturbations (frequency = 500 Hz) were imposed to the length of the preparation. The stiffness was evaluated from the corresponding F and SL sinusoids by analysis of both signals together either in the time domain or in the frequency domain. A short burst (duration = 30 ms) of sinusoidal perturbations was repeated at 5 predetermined times during diastole providing 5 measurements of stiffness during the time interval separating two twitches. These measurements revealed that stiffness increases by 30% during diastole, while a simultaneous expansion of the sarcomeres (amplitude = 10-60 nm) was detected. Measurements of the fluorescence of fura-2 under the same conditions revealed a continuous exponential decline of [Ca2+]i from 210 to 90 nM (constant of time 300 ms) during diastole. In order to test the possibility that the increase of sarcomere stiffness and the decline of [Ca2+]i were coupled during diastole of intact trabeculae, we studied the effect of different free Ca2+-concentrations ([Ca2+]) between 1 and 430 nM on sarcomere stiffness in rat cardiac trabeculae skinned by saponin (n = 17). Stiffness was studied using 500 Hz sinusoidal perturbations of muscle length (ML). We found that, below 70 nM, the stiffness was independent of [Ca2+]; between 70 and 200 nM, the stiffness declined with increase of [Ca2+]; above 200 nM, the stiffness increased steeply with [Ca2+]. The data fitted accurately to the sum of two sigmoids (Hill functions): (1) at [Ca2+] < 200 nM the stiffness decreased with [Ca2+] (EC50 = 160 ± 13 nM; n = −2.6±0.7) and (2) at [Ca2+] > 200 nM, stiffness increased with [Ca2+] (EC50 = 3.4±0.3 μM; n = 2.1±0.2) due to attachment of cross-bridges. From these results, it was possible to reproduce accurately the time course of diastolic stiffness observed in intact trabeculae and to predict the effect on stiffness of a spontaneous elevation of the diastolic [Ca2+]. Identical stiffness measurements were performed in 4 skinned preparations exposed to a cloned fragment of titin (Ti I-II) which has been shown to exhibit a strong interaction with F-actin in vitro. It was anticipated that Ti I-II would compete with endogenous titin for the same binding site on actin in the I-band. Below 200 nM, Ti I-II (2 μM) eliminated the Ca2+-dependence of stiffness. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the Ca2+-sensitivity of the sarcomeres at [Ca2+] < 200 nM, i.e. where the myocytes in intact muscle operate during diastole, involves an association between titin molecules and the thin filament.  相似文献   
9.
Summary Myocardial cells from left ventricles of beating hearts of rats were fixed by immersion in an osmium tetroxide solution containing potassium pyroantimonate to study the electron-microscopic distribution of calcium, the cation being precipitated as an electron-opaque salt (calcium antimonate) by this cytochemical technique. The observed myocytes could be divided into two groups according to their contractile state, evaluated by sarcomere length measurements. In contracted cells (mean sarcomere length 1.43 m) the intramyoflbrillar precipitate was confined to areas of I-bands bordering the A-bands, the intermyofibrillar space showing scarce content in reaction product. Relaxed cells (mean sarcomere length 1.69 m) presented a heavy deposition of reaction product over the sarcomeres, the electron-opaque dots being absent on the H and Z bands. The sarcotubular system and mitochondria were also clearly marked by the reaction product. This second pattern of calcium distribution has not been previously described in heart muscle cells and is interpreted as corresponding to the phase of rise of intracellular calcium which is mediated by membrane depolarization. Our results suggest that different bands of heart sarcomeres show different abilities to bind calcium. The I bands retain the cation even in cells under sustained contraction, probably due to their content in calmodulin; Z and M bands are apparently not involved in calcium sequestration, whereas the content in calcium of the A bands seems to be dependent on the contraction-relaxation cycle of heart myocytes.Supported by Grant HL 06975 from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and AM 18141 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Metabolism and Digestive DiseasesThe authors are grateful to Maria Kapuscinski, Luther B. Joseph, Elisabeth Lawson, Robert Linsmair and Miriam Alojipan for skilled technical assistance  相似文献   
10.
Muscle specific signaling has been shown to originate from myofilaments and their associated cellular structures, including the sarcomeres, costameres or the cardiac intercalated disc. Two signaling hubs that play important biomechanical roles for cardiac and/or skeletal muscle physiology are the N2B and N2A regions in the giant protein titin. Prominent proteins associated with these regions in titin are chaperones Hsp90 and αB-crystallin, members of the four-and-a-half LIM (FHL) and muscle ankyrin repeat protein (Ankrd) families, as well as thin filament-associated proteins, such as myopalladin. This review highlights biological roles and properties of the titin N2B and N2A regions in health and disease. Special emphasis is placed on functions of Ankrd and FHL proteins as mechanosensors that modulate muscle-specific signaling and muscle growth. This region of the sarcomere also emerged as a hotspot for the modulation of passive muscle mechanics through altered titin phosphorylation and splicing, as well as tethering mechanisms that link titin to the thin filament system.  相似文献   
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