The synthesis and deployment of filamin in chicken skeletal muscle. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • During myogenesis in vitro the actin-binding protein filamin is present in myoblasts and early fused cells and is associated with -actinin-containing filament bundles, as judged by double immunofluorescence using antibodies specific for these two proteins. Approximately one day after cell fusion, yet before the development of a-actinin-containing Z line striations, filamin disappears from the cells. Later in myogenesis, several days after the appearance of -actinin-containing Z line striations, filamin reappears and accumulates in the cells. Double immunofluorescence with antibodies to filamin and vimentin (or desmin) reveals that the newly appearing filamin localizes now to the myofibril Z line and is visible there shortly before vimentin or desmin becomes associated with the Z line. Immunofluorescent localization of filamin in isolated chicken skeletal myofibrils and Z disc sheets indicates that filamin has the same distribution as desmin and vimentin; it surrounds each myofibril Z disc and forms honeycomb-like networks within each Z plane of the muscle fiber. Filamin may thus be involved in the transition of desmin and vimentin to the Z disc. Analysis of whole-cell extracts by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by immunoautoradiography shows that filamin is present in myoblasts and in myotubes early after cell fusion. Concomitant with the absence of filamin fluorescence during the subsequent few days of myogenesis, the quantity of filamin is markedly reduced. During this time, metabolic pulse-labeling with 35S-methionine reveals that the synthetic rate of filamin is also markedly reduced. As filamin fluorescence appears at the Z line, the quantity of filamin and its synthetic rate both increase. The removal of filamin from the cells suggests that filamin either may not be required, or may actually interfere with a necessary process, during the early stages of sarcomere morphogenesis. These results also indicate that the periphery of the Z disc is assembled in at least two distinct steps during myogenesis. 1981.

published proceedings

  • Cell

author list (cited authors)

  • Gomer, R. H., & Lazarides, E.

citation count

  • 49

complete list of authors

  • Gomer, RH||Lazarides, E

publication date

  • January 1981

published in