Myogenesis defect due to Toca-1 knockdown can be suppressed by expression of N-WASP |
| |
Authors: | Bhawana George Neeraj Jain Pei Fen Chong Jun Hou Tan Thirumaran Thanabalu |
| |
Affiliation: | School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, 60 Nanyang Drive, Singapore 637551, Republic of Singapore |
| |
Abstract: | Skeletal muscle formation is a multistep process involving proliferation, differentiation, alignment and fusion of myoblasts to form myotubes which fuse with additional myoblast to form myofibers. Toca-1 (Transducer of Cdc42-dependent actin assembly), is an adaptor protein which activates N-WASP in conjunction with Cdc42 to facilitate membrane invagination, endocytosis and actin cytoskeleton remodeling. Expression of Toca-1 in mouse primary myoblasts and C2C12 myoblasts was up-regulated on day 1 of differentiation and subsequently down-regulated during differentiation. Knocking down Toca-1 expression in C2C12 cells (Toca-1KD cells) resulted in a significant decrease in myotube formation and expression of shRNA-resistant Toca-1 in Toca-1KD cells rescued the myogenic defect, suggesting that the knockdown was specific and Toca-1 is essential for myotube formation. Toca-1KD cells exhibited elongated spindle-like morphology, expressed myogenic markers (MyoD and MyHC) and localized N-Cadherin at cell periphery similar to control cells suggesting that Toca-1 is not essential for morphological changes or expression of proteins critical for differentiation. Toca-1KD cells displayed prominent actin fibers suggesting a defect in actin cytoskeleton turnover necessary for cell–cell fusion. Toca-1KD cells migrated faster than control cells and had a reduced number of vinculin patches similar to N-WASPKO MEF cells. Transfection of N-WASP-expressing plasmid into Toca-1KD cells restored myotube formation of Toca-1KD cells. Thus, our results suggest that Toca-1KD cells have defects in formation of myotubes probably due to reduced activity of actin cytoskeleton regulators such as N-WASP. This is the first study to identify and characterize the role of Toca-1 in myogenesis. |
| |
Keywords: | Cell adhesion Arp2/3 complex Actin cytoskeleton Membrane fusion Cell migration Myogenic differentiation |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|