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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The muscle cytoskeleton of mice and men : Structural remodelling in desmin myopathies

Carlsson, Lena January 2001 (has links)
The muscle fibre cytoskeleton of skeletal and heart muscle cells is composed mainly of intermediate filaments (IFs), that surround the myofibrils and connect the peripheral myofibrils with the sarcolemma and the nuclear membrane. Desmin is the first muscle specific IF protein to be produced in developing muscles and is the main IF protein in mature muscles. In skeletal muscle, desmin is particularly abundant at myotendinous and neuromuscular junctions. In the heart an increased amount of desmin is found at intercalated discs and in Purkinje fibres of the conduction system. Interactions between the IFs themselves, and between IFs and other structures such as Z-discs and the sarcolemma, are mediated by intermediate filament associated proteins (IFAPs). A transgenic mice model, which lacks the desmin gene have been developed to study the function of desmin. In these mice, morphological abnormalities are observed in both heart and skeletal muscles. Similar defects have been observed in human myopathies, caused by different mutations in the desmin gene. In the present thesis, skeletal and heart muscles of both wild type and desmin knock-out (K/O) mice have been investigated. Furthermore the cytoskeletal organisation in skeletal muscles from human controls and from a patient with desmin myopathy was examined. In the desmin K/O mice, no morphological alterations were observed during embryogenesis. These mice postnatally developed a cardiomyopathy and a muscle dystrophy in highly used skeletal muscles. Ruptures of the sarcolemma appear to be the primary event leading to muscle degeneration and fibrosis both in cardiac and affected skeletal muscles. In the heart the muscle degeneration gave rise to calcifications, whereas in skeletal muscles regeneration of affected muscle was seen. In mature wild type mice, the IF proteins synemin and paranemin, and the IFAP plectin were present together with desmin at the myofibrillar Z-discs, the sarcolemma, the neuromuscular junctions and the myotendinous junctions. Nestin was only found in these junctional regions. In desmin K/O mice, all four proteins were detected at neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions. The normal network of synemin and paranemin were not observed, whereas the distribution of plectin was preserved. In normal human muscles, synemin, paranemin, plectin and αB-crystallin were colocalised with desmin in between the myofibrils, at the sarcolemma and at myotendinous and neuromuscular junctions. In the human desmin myopathy, the distribution of desmin varied considerably. A normal pattern was seen in some fibres areas, whereas other regions either contained large subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar accumulations of desmin or totally lacked desmin. Nestin, synemin, paranemin, plectin and αB-crystallin also exhibited an abnormal distribution. They were often aggregated in the areas that contained accumulations of desmin. In cultured satellite cells from the patient, a normal network of desmin was present in early passages, whereas aggragates of desmin occurred upon further culturing. In the latter, also the nestin network was disrupted, whereas vimentin showed a normal pattern. αB-crystallin was only present in cells with a disrupted desmin network. Plectin was present in a subset of cells, irrespective of whether desmin was aggregated or showed a normal network. From the present study it can be concluded that an intact desmin network is needed to maintain the integrity of muscle fibres. Desmin may be an important component in the assembly of proteins, which connect the extrasarcomeric cytoskeleton with the extracellular matrix.
2

Strukturen der Kraftübertragung im quergestreiften Muskel : Protein-Protein-Wechselwirkungen und Regulationsmechanismen / Structures of force transduction in cross-striated muscle tissues : protein-protein interactions and mechanisms of their regulation

Gehmlich, Katja January 2004 (has links)
Im Mittelpunkt dieser Arbeit standen Signaltransduktionsprozesse in den Strukturen der Kraftübertragung quergestreifter Muskelzellen, d. h. in den Costameren (Zell-Matrix-Kontakten) und den Glanzstreifen (Zell-Zell-Kontakten der Kardiomyozyten).<br><br>Es ließ sich zeigen, dass sich die Morphologie der Zell-Matrix-Kontakte während der Differenzierung von Skelettmuskelzellen dramatisch ändert, was mit einer veränderten Proteinzusammensetzung einhergeht. Immunfluoreszenz-Analysen von Skelettmuskelzellen verschiedener Differenzierungsstadien implizieren, dass die Signalwege, welche die Dynamik der Fokalkontakte in Nichtmuskelzellen bestimmen, nur für frühe Stadien der Muskeldifferenzierung Relevanz haben können. Ausgehend von diesem Befund wurde begonnen, noch unbekannte Signalwege zu identifizieren, welche die Ausbildung von Costameren kontrollieren: In den Vorläuferstrukturen der Costamere gelang es, eine transiente Interaktion der Proteine Paxillin und Ponsin zu identifizieren. Biochemische Untersuchungen legen nahe, dass Ponsin über eine Skelettmuskel-spezifische Insertion im Carboxyterminus das Adapterprotein Nck2 in diesen Komplex rekrutiert. Es wird vorgeschlagen, dass die drei Proteine einen ternären Signalkomplex bilden, der die Umbauvorgänge der Zell-Matrix-Kontakte kontrolliert und dessen Aktivität von mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPK) reguliert wird.<br><br>Die Anpassungsvorgänge der Strukturen der Kraftübertragung an pathologische Situtation (Kardiomyopathien) in der adulten quergestreiften Muskulatur wurden ausgehend von einem zweiten Protein, dem muscle LIM protein (MLP), untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass ein mutiertes MLP-Protein, das im Menschen eine hypertrophe Kardiomyopathie (HCM) auslöst, strukturelle Defekte aufweist und weniger stabil ist. Weiterhin zeigte dieses mutierte Protein eine verringerte Bindungsfähigkeit an die beiden Liganden N-RAP und alpha-Actinin. Die molekulare Grundlage der HCM-verursachenden Mutationen im MLP-Gen könnte folglich eine Veränderung der Homöostase im ternären Komplex MLP &ndash; N-RAP &ndash; alpha-Actinin sein. Die Expressionsdaten eines neu generierten monoklonalen MLP-Antikörpers deuten darauf hin, dass die Funktionen des MLP nicht nur für die Integrität des Myokards, sondern auch für die der Skelettmuskulatur notwendig sind. / The cell-matrix-contacts (costameres) and cell-cell-contacts (intercalated discs of cardiomyocytes) of cross-striated muscle cells transmit mechanical forces to the exterior. On top of this mechanical function, both structures have been implied to be involved in signal transduction processes.<br><br>Dramatic morphological changes in the overall structure of cell-matrix-contacts of skeletal muscle cells were revealed during differentiation. Moreover, this reorganisation was accompanied by alterations in protein composition. Immunofluorescence microscopy indicated that signalling pathways which control the dynamics of focal contacts in non-muscle cells seem to be important only for early differentiation stages of skeletal muscle cells. To explore novel signalling pathways involved in regulating the formation of costameres, signalling molecules engaged were identified. Thus, paxillin and ponsin transiently interact at the precursors of costameres during muscle development. In addition, biochemical data indicate that a skeletal muscle specific module in the carboxyterminal part of ponsin can recruit the adapter protein Nck2 to this complex. Hence, the three proteins might form a ternary signalling complex involved in controlling the reorganisation of cell-matrix-contacts. Apparently, the activity of this signalling complex is regulated by mitogen activated protein kinases (MAPK).<br><br>A second approach has focussed on adaptational processes of the same structures observed in pathological situations. In particular, the role of muscle LIM protein (MLP) in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) was investigated. It was shown that a HCM-causing mutant MLP protein fails to fold properly and that the consequent loss of stability is reflected in altered binding properties: the mutant MLP protein shows decreased binding to both N-RAP and alpha-actinin. Hence, the molecular basis for HCM-causing mutations in the MLP gene might be an altered homeostasis of the ternary complex MLP &ndash; N-RAP &ndash; alpha-actinin. Increasing evidence indicates that the functions of MLP are required not only for the integrity of the myocardium. In addition, MLP seems to have regulatory functions in skeletal muscle tissues.

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