## Abstract The Mexican axolotl, __Ambystoma mexicanum__, serves as an intriguing model to investigate myofibril organization and heart development in vertebrates. The axolotl has a homozygous recessive cardiac lethal gene β__c__β which causes a failure of ventricular myofibril formation and contra
Ectopic expression of tropomyosin promotes myofibrillogenesis in mutant axolotl hearts
β Scribed by Robert W. Zajdel; Matthew D. Mclean; Sharon L. Lemanski; Mariappan Muthuchamy; David F. Wieczorek; Larry F. Lemanski; Dipak K. Dube
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 980 KB
- Volume
- 213
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1058-8388
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Expression of tropomyosin protein, an essential component of the thin filament, has been found to be drastically reduced in cardiac mutant hearts of the Mexican axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) with no formation of sarcomeric myofibrils. Therefore, this naturally occurring cardiac mutation is an appropriate model to examine the effects of delivering tropomyosin protein or tropomyosin cDNA into the deficient tissue. In this study, we describe the replacement of tropomyosin by using a cationic liposome transfection technique applied to whole hearts in vitro. When mouse β£-tropomyosin cDNA under the control of a cardiac-specific β£-myosin heavy chain promoter was transfected into the mutant hearts, tropomyosin expression was enhanced resulting in the formation of well-organized sarcomeric myofibrils. Transfection of a β€-tropomyosin construct under control of the same promoter did not result in enhanced organization of the myofibrils. Transfection of a β€-galactosidase reporter gene did not result in the formation of organized myofibrils or increased tropomyosin expression. These results demonstrate the importance of β£-tropomyosin to the phenotype of this mutation and to normal myofibril formation. Moreover, we have shown that a crucial contractile protein can be ectopically expressed in cardiac muscle that is deficient in this protein, with the resulting formation of organized sarcomeres.
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## Abstract TPM1ΞΊ is an alternatively spliced isoform of the __TPM1__ gene whose specific role in cardiac development and disease is yet to be elucidated. Although mRNA studies have shown TPM1ΞΊ expression in axolotl heart and skeletal muscle, it has not been quantified. Also the presence of TPM1ΞΊ p
## Abstract A striated muscle isoform of a Tropomyosin (TMβ4) gene was characterized and found to be necessary for contractile function in embryonic heart. The fullβlength clone of this isoform was isolated from the Mexican axolotl (__Ambystoma mexicanum__) and named Axolotl Tropomyosin Cardiacβ3 (
When homozygous, recessive mutant gene c in Ambystoma mexicanum results in a failure of embryonic heart function. This failure is apparently due to abnormal inductive influences from the anterior endoderm resulting in an absence of normal sarcomeric myofibril formation. Biochemical and immunofluores
## Abstract Striated muscle tropomyosin (TM) is described as containing ten exons; 1a, 2b, 3, 4, 5, 6b, 7, 8, and 9a/b. Exon 9a/b has critical troponin binding domains and is found in striated muscle isoforms. We have recently discovered a smooth (exon 2a)/striated (exons 9a/b) isoform expressed in