The effects of mechanical stress on cultured muscle cells were examined with particular interest in myofibril assembly by using a cell-stretching system. We observed that formation and maintenance of cross-striated myofibrils in chick muscle cell cultures was suppressed in the media containing higher concentration of KCl, tetrodotoxin, or ML-9 (an inhibitor of myosin light chain kinase), but periodic stretching of myotubes for several days enabled formation of striated myofibrils just as in standard muscle cultures. However, ryanodine (a blocker of the Ca channel in sarcoplasmic reticulum) and BDM (an inhibitor of myosin-actin interaction) suppressed the stretch-induced myofibrillogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCofilin, a member of the ADF/cofilin family, is an actin-binding protein which is widely distributed among eukaryotic organisms and involved in actin filament dynamics in a variety of cell types. In mammalian striated muscles, muscle-type cofilin (MCF or cofilin-2) is predominantly expressed. Previous investigations have shown that MCF plays an essential role in the regulation of assembly of contractile apparatus in skeletal muscle, but its role in cardiac muscle has remained unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEmbryonic lungs were obtained from embryonic day 13.5 ICR mice. The lung-tip epithelium isolated using dispase treatment was embedded in low-growth factor Matrigel, cultured in DMEM/F12 medium containing 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
January 2018
There are two classes of myosin, XI and VIII, in higher plants. Myosin XI moves actin filaments at high speed and its enzyme activity is also very high. In contrast, myosin VIII moves actin filaments very slowly with very low enzyme activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParamyosin is a myosin-binding protein characteristic of invertebrate animals, while troponin is a Ca-dependent regulator of muscle contraction. Both proteins are widely distributed in protostomes, while in deuterostomes, their distribution is limited; namely, presence of paramyosin and absence of troponin are common features in echinoderm muscles, while muscles of chordates contain troponin but lack paramyosin. In this study, we examined the muscle of a hemichordate, acorn worm, to clarify whether this animal is like echinoderms or like the other deuterostome animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe functions of type II diacylglycerol kinase (DGK) δ and -η in the brain are still unclear. As a first step, we investigated the spatial and temporal expression of DGKδ and -η in the brains of mice. DGKδ2, but not DGKδ1, was highly expressed in layers II-VI of the cerebral cortex; CA-CA3 regions and dentate gyrus of hippocampus; mitral cell, glomerular and granule cell layers of the olfactory bulb; and the granule cell layer in the cerebellum in 1- to 32-week-old mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTroponin, a Ca(2+)-dependent regulator of striated muscle contraction, has been characterized in vertebrates, protochordates (amphioxus and ascidian), and many invertebrate animals that are categorized in protostomes, but it has not been detected in echinoderms, such as sea urchin and sea cucumber, members of subphylum Eleutherozoa. In this study, we examined the muscle of a species of isocrinid sea lilies, a member of subphylum Pelmatozoa, that constitute the most basal group of extant echinoderms to clarify whether troponin is lacking from the early evolution of echinoderms. Native thin filaments were released from the muscle homogenates in a relaxing buffer containing ATP and EGTA, a Ca(2+)-chelator, and were collected by ultra-centrifugation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCofilin is an actin regulatory protein that plays a critical role in actin filament dynamics in a variety of cells. We have previously demonstrated that excess cofilin in skeletal muscle cells leads to disruption of actin filaments, followed by actin-cofilin rod formation in the cytoplasm. In this study, to further clarify the role of cofilin in actin assembly during myofibrillogenesis, cofilin expression was suppressed in cultured chicken skeletal muscle cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTroponin is well known as a Ca(2+)-dependent regulator of striated muscle contraction and it has been generally accepted that troponin functions as an inhibitor of muscle contraction or actin-myosin interaction at low Ca(2+) concentrations, and Ca(2+) at higher concentrations removes the inhibitory action of troponin. Recently, however, troponin became detectable in non-striated muscles of several invertebrates and in addition, unique troponin that functions as a Ca(2+)-dependent activator of muscle contraction has been detected in protochordate animals, although troponin in vertebrate striated muscle is known as an inhibitor of the contraction in the absence of a Ca(2+). Further studies on troponin in invertebrate muscle, especially in non-striated muscle, would provide new insight into the evolution of regulatory systems for muscle contraction and diverse function of troponin and related proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTroponin, a Ca2+-dependent regulator of muscle contraction, acts as an inhibitor of the actin−myosin interaction in the absence of Ca2+ during contraction in vertebrate striated muscle. However, variation has been observed in the mode of troponin-dependent regulation among the animals belonging to Protochordata, the taxon most closely related to Vertebrata. Although troponin in striated muscle of a cephalochordate amphioxus functions as an inhibitor in the absence of Ca2+ as in vertebrates [Dennisson, J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTroponin regulates contraction of vertebrate striated muscle in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. More specifically, it acts as an inhibitor of actin-myosin interaction in the absence of Ca(2+) during contraction. In vertebrates, this regulatory mechanism is unlike that in some less highly derived taxa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMyosin-binding protein-C (MyBP-C), also known as C-protein, is a major myosin-binding protein characteristic of striated muscle, and plays a critical role in myofibril organization, especially in registration of thick filaments in the sarcomeres during myofibrillogenesis. We previously demonstrated that cardiac-type MyBP-C is involved early in the process of myofibrillogenesis in both cardiac and skeletal muscle during chicken muscle development. Two variants (type I and type II) have been detected in chicken cardiac MyBP-C; they differ only in the presence or absence of a sequence of 15 amino acid residues (termed P-seq) that includes a phosphorylation site for cyclic AMP-dependent kinase in the cardiac MyBP-C motif ( Yasuda et al, 1995 ).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo myosin light chain (MLC) kinase (MLCK) proteins, smooth muscle (encoded by mylk1 gene) and skeletal (encoded by mylk2 gene) MLCK, have been shown to be expressed in mammals. Even though phosphorylation of its putative substrate, MLC2, is recognized as a key regulator of cardiac contraction, a MLCK that is preferentially expressed in cardiac muscle has not yet been identified. In this study, we characterized a new kinase encoded by a gene homologous to mylk1 and -2, named cardiac MLCK, which is specifically expressed in the heart in both atrium and ventricle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCofilin plays a critical role in actin filament dynamics in a variety of eukaryotic cells. Its activity is regulated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of a Ser3 residue on the N-terminal side and/or its binding to a phosphoinositide, PIP(2). To clarify how cofilin activity is regulated in muscle cells, we generated analogues of the unphosphorylated form (A3-cofilin) and phosphorylated form (D3-cofilin) by converting the phosphorylation site (Ser3) of cofilin to Ala and Asp, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite fast protein degradation in muscles, protein concentrations remain constant during differentiation and maintenance of muscle tissues. Myogenin, a basic helix-loop-helix-type myogenic transcription factor, plays a critical role through transcriptional activation in myogenesis as well as muscle maintenance. TBP-interacting protein 120/cullin-associated neddylation-dissociated (TIP120/CAND) is known to bind to cullin and negatively regulate SCF (Skp1-Cullin1-F-box protein) ubiquitin ligase, although its physiological role has not been elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActin filaments align around myosin filaments in the correct polarity and in a hexagonal arrangement to form cross-striated structures. It has been postulated that this myosin-actin interaction is important in the initial phase of myofibrillogenesis. It was previously demonstrated that an inhibitor of actin-myosin interaction, BDM (2,3-butanedione monoxime), suppresses myofibril formation in muscle cells in culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo cofilin isoforms, a muscle-type (MCF) and a non-muscle-type (NMCF), are co-expressed in developing mammalian skeletal and cardiac muscles. To clarify how they are involved in the actin filament dynamics during myofibrillogenesis, we examined their localization in muscle tissues and cultured muscle cells using immunocytochemical methods, and their interaction with F-actin in vitro. NMCF was mostly detected in a diffuse pattern in the cytoplasm but MCF was partly localized to the striated structures in myofibrils.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCertain types of cell both in vivo and in vitro contain invaginated or convoluted nuclei. However, the mechanisms and functional significance of the deformation of the nuclear shape remain enigmatic. Recent studies have suggested that three types of cytoskeleton, microfilaments, microtubules and intermediate filaments, are involved in the formation of nuclear invaginations, depending upon cell type or conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiac myosin-binding protein-C (MyBP-C), also known as C-protein, is one of the major myosin-binding proteins localizing at A-bands. MyBP-C has three isoforms encoded by three distinct genes: fast-skeletal, slow-skeletal, and cardiac type. Herein, we are reporting a novel alternative spliced form of cardiac MyBP-C, MyBP-C(+), which includes an extra 30 nucleotides, encoding 10 amino acids in the carboxyl-terminal connectin/titin binding region.
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