Affiliation:
1. DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company, Wilmington, Delaware
2. Lankenau Institute for Medical Research, Wynnewood
3. Wistar Institute
4. and Biomedical Imaging Core Facility, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The mammalian
Bin1/Amphiphysin II
gene encodes an assortment of alternatively spliced adapter proteins that exhibit markedly divergent expression and subcellular localization profiles. Bin1 proteins have been implicated in a variety of different cellular processes, including endocytosis, actin cytoskeletal organization, transcription, and stress responses. To gain insight into the physiological functions of the
Bin1
gene, we have disrupted it by homologous recombination in the mouse.
Bin1
loss had no discernible impact on either endocytosis or phagocytosis in mouse embryo-derived fibroblasts and macrophages, respectively. Similarly, actin cytoskeletal organization, proliferation, and apoptosis in embryo fibroblasts were all unaffected by
Bin1
loss. In vivo, however,
Bin1
loss resulted in perinatal lethality. Bin1 has been reported to affect muscle cell differentiation and T-tubule formation. No striking histological abnormalities were evident in skeletal muscle of
Bin1
null embryos, but severe ventricular cardiomyopathy was observed in these embryos. Ultrastructurally, myofibrils in ventricular cardiomyocytes of
Bin1
null embryos were severely disorganized. These results define a developmentally critical role for the
Bin1
gene in cardiac muscle development.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
115 articles.
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