Author:
Sharma Akashi,Agarwal Megha,Kumar Amit,Kumar Pankaj,Saini Masum,Kardon Gabrielle,Mathew Sam J.
Abstract
SummaryMyosin heavy chains (MyHCs) are contractile proteins that are part of the thick filaments of the functional unit of the skeletal muscle, the sarcomere. In addition to MyHCs that are part of the adult muscle contractile network, two MyHCs - MyHC-embryonic and -perinatal are expressed during muscle development and are only transiently expressed in the adult during regeneration. The functions performed by these MyHCs has been a long-standing question and using a targeted mouse allele, we have characterized the role of MyHC-embryonic. Analysis of loss-of-function mice reveals that lack of MyHC-embryonic leads to mis-regulation of other MyHCs, alterations in fiber size, fiber number and fiber type at neonatal stages. We also find that loss of MyHC-embryonic leads to mis-regulation of genes involved in muscle differentiation. A broad theme from these studies is that loss of MyHC-embryonic has distinct effects on different muscles, possibly reflecting the unique fiber type composition of different muscles. Most significantly, our results indicate that MyHC-embryonic is required during embryonic and fetal myogenesis to regulate myogenic progenitor and myoblast differentiation in a non-cell autonomous manner via Mitogen Activated Protein Kinase (MAPKinase) and Fibroblast Growth Factor (FGF) signaling. Thus, our results signify that MyHC-embryonic is a key regulator of myogenic differentiation during embryonic, fetal and neonatal myogenesis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
6 articles.
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