MusTRD can regulate postnatal fiber-specific expression
pmid: 16494860
MusTRD can regulate postnatal fiber-specific expression
Human MusTRD1alpha1 was isolated as a result of its ability to bind a critical element within the Troponin I slow upstream enhancer (TnIslow USE) and was predicted to be a regulator of slow fiber-specific genes. To test this hypothesis in vivo, we generated transgenic mice expressing hMusTRD1alpha1 in skeletal muscle. Adult transgenic mice show a complete loss of slow fibers and a concomitant replacement by fast IIA fibers, resulting in postural muscle weakness. However, developmental analysis demonstrates that transgene expression has no impact on embryonic patterning of slow fibers but causes a gradual postnatal slow to fast fiber conversion. This conversion was underpinned by a demonstrable repression of many slow fiber-specific genes, whereas fast fiber-specific gene expression was either unchanged or enhanced. These data are consistent with our initial predictions for hMusTRD1alpha1 and suggest that slow fiber genes contain a specific common regulatory element that can be targeted by MusTRD proteins.
- Children's Medical Research Institute Australia
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Muscle Proteins, Nuclear Proteins, Mice, Transgenic, Cell Biology, Hindlimb, Mice, Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch, Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch, Trans-Activators, Animals, Humans, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology
Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Muscle Proteins, Nuclear Proteins, Mice, Transgenic, Cell Biology, Hindlimb, Mice, Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch, Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch, Trans-Activators, Animals, Humans, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology
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