The detection of activin receptor typeIIB ( protein, a prominent negative muscle growth regulator has paramount value in augmenting growth traits through molecular breeding schemes in chicken. The study was formulated to establish primary chicken embryo myoblast culture (CEM) using 9th and 18th day chick embryos and to develop antibodies for immunodetection of protein. The physicochemical and structural attributes of the sequence were evaluated to identify substantial antigenic regions. The sequence was transfected into CEM and expressed protein was injected subcutaneously into rats to produce hyperimmune serum. The average propensity of protein sequence for beta turns, surface accessibility, chain flexibility, antigenicity, hydrophilicity and linear epitopes was 0.978, 1.000, 0.991, 1.038, 1.258 and 0.512, respectively. The 9th day CEM exhibited confluency (80-90%) earlier than the 18th day. The expression of myogenic regulatory factors in 9th day myoblasts was higher than the 18th day by 7.28, 5.16, 6.28 and 6.93 folds for , MRF4, and , respectively. The mRNA was downregulated by 2.54 folds on the 9th day compared to the 18th day myoblasts and protein varied significantly between 9th and 18th day myoblasts. The CEM culture can be harnessed unequivocally to investigate molecular mechanisms underlying muscle growth besides raising antibodies.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10495398.2020.1870483 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!