scholarly journals Regulation of smooth muscle differentiation by the myocardin family of serum response factor co-factors

2005 ◽  
Vol 3 (9) ◽  
pp. 1976-1984 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. MACK ◽  
J. S. HINSON
Development ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 126 (10) ◽  
pp. 2053-2062 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.E. Landerholm ◽  
X.R. Dong ◽  
J. Lu ◽  
N.S. Belaguli ◽  
R.J. Schwartz ◽  
...  

Coronary artery smooth muscle (SM) cells originate from proepicardial cells that migrate over the surface of the heart, undergo epithelial to mesenchymal transformation and invade the subepicardial and cardiac matrix. Prior to contact with the heart, proepicardial cells exhibit no expression of smooth muscle markers including SMalphaactin, SM22alpha, calponin, SMgammaactin or SM-myosin heavy chain detectable by RT-PCR or by immunostaining. To identify factors required for coronary smooth muscle differentiation, we excised proepicardial cells from Hamburger-Hamilton stage-17 quail embryos and examined them ex vivo. Proepicardial cells initially formed an epithelial colony that was uniformly positive for cytokeratin, an epicardial marker. Transcripts for flk-1, Nkx 2.5, GATA4 or smooth muscle markers were undetectable, indicating an absence of endothelial, myocardial or preformed smooth muscle cells. By 24 hours, cytokeratin-positive cells became SMalphaactin-positive. Moreover, serum response factor, undetectable in freshly isolated proepicardial cells, became strongly expressed in virtually all epicardial cells. By 72 hours, a subset of epicardial cells exhibited a rearrangement of cytoskeletal actin, focal adhesion formation and acquisition of a motile phenotype. Coordinately with mesenchymal transformation, calponin, SM22alpha and SMgammaactin became expressed. By 5–10 days, SM-myosin heavy chain mRNA was found, by which time nearly all cells had become mesenchymal. RT-PCR showed that large increases in serum response factor expression coincide with smooth muscle differentiation in vitro. Two different dominant-negative serum response factor constructs prevented the appearance of calponin-, SM22alpha- and SMgammaactin-positive cells. By contrast, dominant-negative serum response factor did not block mesenchymal transformation nor significantly reduce the number of cytokeratin-positive cells. These results indicate that the stepwise differentiation of coronary smooth muscle cells from proepicardial cells requires transcriptionally active serum response factor.


2000 ◽  
Vol 275 (13) ◽  
pp. 9814-9822 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph M. Miano ◽  
Michael J. Carlson ◽  
Jeffrey A. Spencer ◽  
Ravi P. Misra

2011 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 354-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abel Martin-Garrido ◽  
David I. Brown ◽  
Alicia N. Lyle ◽  
Anna Dikalova ◽  
Bonnie Seidel-Rogol ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 345 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul R. KEMP ◽  
James C. METCALFE

Serum response factor (SRF) is a key transcriptional activator of the c-fos gene and of muscle-specific gene expression. We have identified four forms of the SRF coding sequence, SRF-L (the previously identified form), SRF-M, SRF-S and SRF-I, that are produced by alternative splicing. The new forms of SRF lack regions of the C-terminal transactivation domain by splicing out of exon 5 (SRF-M), exons 4 and 5 (SRF-S) and exons 3, 4 and 5 (SRF-I). SRF-M is expressed at similar levels to SRF-L in differentiated vascular smooth-muscle cells and skeletal-muscle cells, whereas SRF-L is the predominant form in many other tissues. SRF-S expression is restricted to vascular smooth muscle and SRF-I expression is restricted to the embryo. Transfection of SRF-L and SRF-M into C2C12 cells showed that both forms are transactivators of the promoter of the smooth-muscle-specific gene SM22α, whereas SRF-I acted as a dominant negative form of SRF.


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