Publication | Open Access
Cloning and characterization of two human skeletal muscle alpha-actinin genes located on chromosomes 1 and 11.
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Citations
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References
1992
Year
Muscle FunctionGeneticsMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsCytoskeletonDegenerate Oligonucleotide PrimersCellular PhysiologyMusculoskeletal ResearchMuscle PhysiologySkeletal MuscleChromosomes 1Conserved SequencesHealth SciencesMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologySkeletal BiologyHuman Musculoskeletal SystemGene ExpressionNeuromuscular PhysiologyCell BiologyMedicine
Conserved sequences of dystrophin, beta-spectrin, and alpha-actinin were used to plan a set of degenerate oligonucleotide primers with which we amplified a portion of a human alpha-actinin gene transcript. Using this short clone as a probe, we isolated and characterized full-length cDNA clones for two human alpha-actinin genes (ACTN2 and ACTN3). These genes encode proteins that are structurally similar to known alpha-actinins with approximately 80% amino acid identity to each other and to the previously characterized human nonmuscle gene. ACTN2 is the human homolog of a previously characterized chicken gene while ACTN3 represents a novel gene product. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that ACTN2 is expressed in both skeletal and cardiac muscle, but ACTN3 expression is limited to skeletal muscle. As with other muscle-specific isoforms, the EF-hand domains in ACTN2 and ACTN3 are predicted to be incapable of binding calcium, suggesting that actin binding is not calcium sensitive. ACTN2 was mapped to human chromosome 1q42-q43 and ACTN3 to 11q13-q14 by somatic cell hybrid panels and fluorescent in situ hybridization. These results demonstrate that some of the isoform diversity of alpha-actinins is the result of transcription from different genetic loci.
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