scholarly journals Syncoilin is required for generating maximum isometric stress in skeletal muscle but dispensable for muscle cytoarchitecture

2008 ◽  
Vol 294 (5) ◽  
pp. C1175-C1182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianlin Zhang ◽  
Marie-Louise Bang ◽  
David S. Gokhin ◽  
Yingchun Lu ◽  
Li Cui ◽  
...  

Syncoilin is a striated muscle-specific intermediate filament-like protein, which is part of the dystrophin-associated protein complex (DPC) at the sarcolemma and provides a link between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton through its interaction with α-dystrobrevin and desmin. Its upregulation in various neuromuscular diseases suggests that syncoilin may play a role in human myopathies. To study the functional role of syncoilin in cardiac and skeletal muscle in vivo, we generated syncoilin-deficient ( syncoilin−/−) mice. Our detailed analysis of these mice up to 2 yr of age revealed that syncoilin is entirely dispensable for cardiac and skeletal muscle development and maintenance of cellular structure but is required for efficient lateral force transmission during skeletal muscle contraction. Notably, syncoilin−/− skeletal muscle generates less maximal isometric stress than wild-type (WT) muscle but is as equally susceptible to eccentric contraction-induced injury as WT muscle. This suggests that syncoilin may play a supportive role for desmin in the efficient coupling of mechanical stress between the myofibril and fiber exterior. It is possible that the reduction in isometric stress production may predispose the syncoilin skeletal muscle to a dystrophic condition.

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Danny A. Stark

[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] Skeletal muscle can be isolated into 642 individual muscles and makes up to one third to one half of the mass of the human body. Each of these muscles is specified and patterned prenatally and after birth they will increase in size and take on characteristics suited to each muscle's unique function. To make the muscles functional, each muscle cell must be innervated by a motor neuron, which will also affect the characteristics of the mature muscle. In a healthy adult, muscles will maintain their specialized pattern and function during physiological homeostasis, and will also recapitulate them if the integrity or health of the muscle is disrupted. This repair and regeneration is dependent satellite cells, the skeletal muscle stem cells. In this dissertation, we study a family of receptor tyrosine kinases, Ephs, and their juxtacrine ephrin ligands in the context of skeletal muscle specification and regeneration. First, using a classical ephrin 'stripe' assay to test for contact-mediated repulsion, we found that satellite cells respond to a subset of ephrins with repulsive motility in vitro and that these forward signals through Ephs also promote patterning of differentiating myotubes parallel to ephrin stripes. This pattering can be replicated in a heterologous in vivo system (the hindbrain of the developing quail, where neural crest cells migrate in streams to the branchial arches, and in the forelimb of the developing quail, where presumptive limb myoblasts emigrate from the somite). Second, we present evidence that specific pairwise interactions between Eph receptor tyrosine kinases and ephrin ligands are required to ensure appropriate muscle innervation when it is originally set during postnatal development and when it is recapitulated after muscle or nerve trauma during adulthood. We show expression of a single ephrin, ephrin-A3, exclusively on type I (slow) myofibers shortly after birth, while its receptor EphA8 is only localized to fast motor endplates, suggesting a functional repulsive interaction for motor axon guidance and/or synaptogenesis. Adult EFNA3-/- mutant mice show a significant loss of slow myofibers, while misexpression of ephrin-A3 on fast myofibers results in a switch from a fast fiber type to slow in the context of sciatic nerve injury and regrowth. Third, we show that EphA7 is expressed on satellite cell derived myocytes in vitro, and marks both myocytes and regenerating myofibers in vivo. In the EPHA7 knockout mouse, we find a regeneration defect in a barium chloride injury model starting 3 days post injection in vivo, and that cultured mutant satellite cells are slow to differentiate and divide. Finally, we present other potential Ephs and ephrins that may affect skeletal muscle, such as EphB1 that is expressed on all MyHC-IIb fibers and a subset of MyHC-IIx fibers, and we show a multitude of Ephs and ephrins at the neuromuscular junction that appear to localize on specific myofibers and at different areas of the synapse. We propose that Eph/ephrin signaling, though well studied in development, continues to be important in regulating post natal development, regeneration, and homeostasis of skeletal muscle.


1996 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 332-340 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. Ingalls ◽  
G. L. Warren ◽  
D. A. Lowe ◽  
D. B. Boorstein ◽  
R. B. Armstrong

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of four anesthetic regimens on in vivo contractile function of mouse ankle dorsiflexor muscles. The torque-frequency and torque-velocity relationships were determined for the following anesthetics: fentanyl-droperidol and diazepam (F-d/d); ketamine and xylazine (K/x); pentobarbital sodium (Ps); and methoxyflurane (Mf). Mf, Ps, and F-d/d regimens resulted in comparable contractile responses at low doses, whereas K/x produced a relative depression in isometric contractile function as shown by a decrease in the torque-time integral at the 300-Hz stimulation frequency (-13.9%; P < 0.05). Moreover, K/x caused a shift to the left in the torque-frequency curve as indicated by increases in torque-time integrals at 25 and 50 Hz. Both Ps and F-d/d regimens exhibited dose-dependent effects during the isovelocity contractions. Ps significantly reduced work (-28.7%) and average power (-28.9%) at 800 degrees/s at the high dose. In contrast, F-d/d anesthesia resulted in increases in peak torque (16-20%) and work (15-18%) output at all eccentric contraction velocities at the high dose, whereas average power was increased only at -800 (17%) and -1,000 degrees/s (17%). In conclusion, commonly used anesthetic regimens can affect the contractile response in vivo; K/x and Ps yield smaller torque outputs, whereas Mf and F-d/d consistently produce larger contractile responses. Mf and F-d/d are recommended for use in studying skeletal muscle function in mice in vivo.


Development ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 125 (13) ◽  
pp. 2349-2358 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Rawls ◽  
M.R. Valdez ◽  
W. Zhang ◽  
J. Richardson ◽  
W.H. Klein ◽  
...  

The myogenic basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) genes - MyoD, Myf5, myogenin and MRF4 - exhibit distinct, but overlapping expression patterns during development of the skeletal muscle lineage and loss-of-function mutations in these genes result in different effects on muscle development. MyoD and Myf5 have been shown to act early in the myogenic lineage to establish myoblast identity, whereas myogenin acts later to control myoblast differentiation. In mice lacking myogenin, there is a severe deficiency of skeletal muscle, but some residual muscle fibers are present in mutant mice at birth. Mice lacking MRF4 are viable and have skeletal muscle, but they upregulate myogenin expression, which could potentially compensate for the absence of MRF4. Previous studies in which Myf5 and MRF4 null mutations were combined suggested that these genes do not share overlapping myogenic functions in vivo. To determine whether the functions of MRF4 might overlap with those of myogenin or MyoD, we generated double mutant mice lacking MRF4 and either myogenin or MyoD. MRF4/myogenin double mutant mice contained a comparable number of residual muscle fibers to mice lacking myogenin alone and myoblasts from those double mutant mice formed differentiated multinucleated myotubes in vitro as efficiently as wild-type myoblasts, indicating that neither myogenin nor MRF4 is absolutely essential for myoblast differentiation. Whereas mice lacking either MRF4 or MyoD were viable and did not show defects in muscle development, MRF4/MyoD double mutants displayed a severe muscle deficiency similar to that in myogenin mutants. Myogenin was expressed in MRF4/MyoD double mutants, indicating that myogenin is insufficient to support normal myogenesis in vivo. These results reveal unanticipated compensatory roles for MRF4 and MyoD in the muscle differentiation pathway and suggest that a threshold level of myogenic bHLH factors is required to activate muscle structural genes, with this level normally being achieved by combinations of multiple myogenic bHLH factors.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (21) ◽  
pp. 5409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Vicente ◽  
Jussep Salgado-Almario ◽  
Joaquim Soriano ◽  
Miguel Burgos ◽  
Beatriz Domingo ◽  
...  

Mitochondria are believed to play an important role in shaping the intracellular Ca2+ transients during skeletal muscle contraction. There is discussion about whether mitochondrial matrix Ca2+ dynamics always mirror the cytoplasmic changes and whether this happens in vivo in whole organisms. In this study, we characterized cytosolic and mitochondrial Ca2+ signals during spontaneous skeletal muscle contractions in zebrafish embryos expressing bioluminescent GFP-aequorin (GA, cytoplasm) and mitoGFP-aequorin (mitoGA, trapped in the mitochondrial matrix). The Ca2+ transients measured with GA and mitoGA reflected contractions of the trunk observed by transmitted light. The mitochondrial uncoupler FCCP and the inhibitor of the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), DS16570511, abolished mitochondrial Ca2+ transients whereas they increased the frequency of cytosolic Ca2+ transients and muscle contractions, confirming the subcellular localization of mitoGA. Mitochondrial Ca2+ dynamics were also determined with mitoGA and were found to follow closely cytoplasmic changes, with a slower decay. Cytoplasmic Ca2+ kinetics and propagation along the trunk and tail were characterized with GA and with the genetically encoded fluorescent Ca2+ indicator, Twitch-4. Although fluorescence provided a better spatio-temporal resolution, GA was able to resolve the same kinetic parameters while allowing continuous measurements for hours.


2020 ◽  
Vol 318 (1) ◽  
pp. C215-C224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joaquin M. Muriel ◽  
Andrea O’Neill ◽  
Jaclyn P. Kerr ◽  
Emily Kleinhans-Welte ◽  
Richard M. Lovering ◽  
...  

Intermediate filaments (IFs) contribute to force transmission, cellular integrity, and signaling in skeletal muscle. We previously identified keratin 19 (Krt19) as a muscle IF protein. We now report the presence of a second type I muscle keratin, Krt18. Krt18 mRNA levels are about half those for Krt19 and only 1:1,000th those for desmin; the protein was nevertheless detectable in immunoblots. Muscle function, measured by maximal isometric force in vivo, was moderately compromised in Krt18-knockout ( Krt18-KO) or dominant-negative mutant mice ( Krt18 DN), but structure was unaltered. Exogenous Krt18, introduced by electroporation, was localized in a reticulum around the contractile apparatus in wild-type muscle and to a lesser extent in muscle lacking Krt19 or desmin or both proteins. Exogenous Krt19, which was either reticular or aggregated in controls, became reticular more frequently in Krt19-null than in Krt18-null, desmin-null, or double-null muscles. Desmin was assembled into the reticulum normally in all genotypes. Notably, all three IF proteins appeared in overlapping reticular structures. We assessed the effect of Krt18 on susceptibility to injury in vivo by electroporating siRNA into tibialis anterior (TA) muscles of control and Krt19-KO mice and testing 2 wk later. Results showed a 33% strength deficit (reduction in maximal torque after injury) compared with siRNA-treated controls. Conversely, electroporation of siRNA to Krt19 into Krt18-null TA yielded a strength deficit of 18% after injury compared with controls. Our results suggest that Krt18 plays a complementary role to Krt19 in skeletal muscle in both assembling keratin-based filaments and transducing contractile force.


2007 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 47-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Paterson ◽  
Ian R Kelsall ◽  
Patricia T W Cohen

A prediabetic phenotype of glucose intolerance, insulin resistance and obesity was observed at ∼12 months of age in mice homozygous for a null allele of the major skeletal muscle glycogen-targeting subunit GM of protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and derived from a 129/Ola donor strain. In this study, backcrossing of these mice (termed obese mice) onto two different genetic backgrounds gave rise to lean, glucose-tolerant, insulin-sensitive mice (termed lean mice), indicating that at least one variant gene in the 129/Ola background, not present in the C57BL/6 or 129s2/sV background, is required for the development of the prediabetic phenotype of obese mice. Slightly elevated AMP-activated protein kinase α2 activity in the skeletal muscle of lean C57BL/6 mice was also observed to a lesser extent in the obese mice. Normal or slightly raised in vivo glucose transport in lean C57BL/6 mice compared with decreased glucose transport in the obese mice supports the tenet that adequate transport of glucose may be a key factor in preventing the development of the prediabetic phenotype. The pH 6.8/pH 8.6 activity ratio of phosphorylase kinase was increased in lean C57BL/6 mice compared with controls indicating that phosphorylase kinase is an in vivo substrate of PP1-GM.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 1983-1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris S. Blagden ◽  
Larry Fromm ◽  
Steven J. Burden

ABSTRACT Gene expression in skeletal muscle is regulated by a family of myogenic basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins. The binding of these bHLH proteins, notably MyoD and myogenin, to E-boxes in their own regulatory regions is blocked by protein kinase C (PKC)-mediated phosphorylation of a single threonine residue in their basic region. Because electrical stimulation increases PKC activity in skeletal muscle, these data have led to an attractive model suggesting that electrical activity suppresses gene expression by stimulating phosphorylation of this critical threonine residue in myogenic bHLH proteins. We show that electrical activity stimulates phosphorylation of myogenin at threonine 87 (T87) in vivo and that calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), as well as PKC, catalyzes this reaction in vitro. We find that phosphorylation of myogenin at T87 is dispensable for skeletal muscle development. We show, however, that the decrease in myogenin (myg) expression following innervation is delayed and that the increase in expression following denervation is accelerated in mutant mice lacking phosphorylation of myogenin at T87. These data indicate that two distinct innervation-dependent mechanisms restrain myogenin activity: an inactivation mechanism mediated by phosphorylation of myogenin at T87, and a second, novel regulatory mechanism that regulates myg gene activity independently of T87 phosphorylation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karla P. Garcia-Pelagio ◽  
Robert J. Bloch

Intermediate filaments (IFs), composed primarily by desmin and keratins, link the myofibrils to each other, to intracellular organelles, and to the sarcolemma. There they may play an important role in transfer of contractile force from the Z-disks and M-lines of neighboring myofibrils to costameres at the membrane, across the membrane to the extracellular matrix, and ultimately to the tendon (“lateral force transmission”). We measured the elasticity of the sarcolemma and the connections it makes at costameres with the underlying contractile apparatus of individual fast twitch muscle fibers of desmin-null mice. By positioning a suction pipet to the surface of the sarcolemma and applying increasing pressure, we determined the pressure at which the sarcolemma separated from nearby sarcomeres, Pseparation, and the pressure at which the isolated sarcolemma burst, Pbursting. We also examined the time required for the intact sarcolemma-costamere-sarcomere complex to reach equilibrium at lower pressures. All measurements showed the desmin-null fibers to have slower equilibrium times and lower Pseparation and Pbursting than controls, suggesting that the sarcolemma and its costameric links to nearby contractile structures were weaker in the absence of desmin. Comparisons to earlier values determined for muscles lacking dystrophin or synemin suggest that the desmin-null phenotype is more stable than the former and less stable than the latter. Our results are consistent with the moderate myopathy seen in desmin-null muscles and support the idea that desmin contributes significantly to sarcolemmal stability and lateral force transmission.


Author(s):  
M. Sierra ◽  
M.J. Muñoz ◽  
J. Grasa

The main objective of this work is to characterize the fatigue contractile properties of threedifferent rat muscles (Tibialis Anterior, Extensor Digitorium Longus and Soleus) in order toobtain experimental parameters for numerical simulations.Experiments were conducted “in vivo" on three groups (n = 6) of male Wistar rats (210 +/- 11g)using a protocol developed by authors in previous works. Muscles were subjected to anelectrical stimulus to achieve tetanic contraction during ten seconds. Digital Image Correlationwas used during tests for 3D strain and displacements measurement that allow the correlationwith the finite element simulations.By means of Computed Tomography, a precise reconstruction of both bone and muscle of therat hindlimb geometry was obtained. The methodology proposed allows to obtain and validatecomputational simulations of skeletal muscle fatigue under different characteristics related tofiber types.63


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