Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0162473 (
Frey
)
2,599
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It is believed that brief, high amplitude Ca2+ transients, as found in fast-twitch muscles, are not sufficient to activate the
calcineurin
(Cn)-dependent signaling pathway involved in regulation of slow myosin and slow sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase genes (Olson and Williams, Cell 101: 689-692, 2000). The results reported here try to fill the gap between this molecular knowledge, and the still fragmentary pieces of information on a possible different role of
calcineurin
in the same type of muscles. In the present work
calcineurin
was determined immunocytochemically by labeling fast- and slow-twitch fibers of representative rabbit muscles with anti-CnB antibodies, and was assessed by western blotting of isolated subcellular fractions. Calcineurin was found to be largely soluble and to be constitutively overexpressed in fast muscle as CnAalpha and CnAbeta isoforms, the latter appearing to be predominant. Particulate
calcineurin
was not only associated with myofibrils but also with membranes of various origins. Fluorescence microscopy showed that
calcineurin
was distributed in the same pattern with respect to sarcomeres in both types of fibers, and formed punctate dots spanning the I-Z-I region, rather than being exclusively located at the Z-line, a disposition described for cardiomyocytes (
Frey
et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 97: 14,632-14,637, 2000). From knowledge that, in mammalian skeletal muscle fibers, junctional triads are located at the A-I band boundary, we explored the distribution of
calcineurin
between triadic components, after having verified that it was present in very low amounts in dystrophin-enriched sarcolemmal membranes. Our results demonstrate that a small but significant proportion of
calcineurin
coenriched with transverse tubules (TT), and copurified with the DHPR and with DHPR-associated PKA-AKAP15/18, thus suggesting that it is assembled as a multiprotein complex in the junctional membrane domain of TT. The membrane specificity of this association is further corroborated by the negative evidence for the presence of
calcineurin
in SR terminal cisternae. Calcineurin was separated from the DHPR and isolated as a AKAP15/18 subcomplex, including beta2 adrenergic receptor, in addition to PKA and
calcineurin
, following equilibrium centrifugation of detergent extracts on a linear sucrose gradient. We show that the alpha1 subunit skeletal isoform of the DHPR, is a substrate for
calcineurin
dephosphorylation, after previous phosphorylation by endogenous PKA.
...
PMID:Clues to calcineurin function in mammalian fast-twitch muscle. 1203 88