Publication | Open Access
Regulation of expression of avian slow myosin heavy-chain isoforms
13
Citations
28
References
1989
Year
Muscle FunctionMolecular RegulationCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyProtein ExpressionMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleGrowth RatePublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologyMyosin ExpressionGene ExpressionDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyMuscle OverloadMedicineSarcopeniaNeuromusculoskeletal Disorder
The slow tonic anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) muscle of the chicken contains two isomyosins, namely SM-1 and SM-2. The proportions of the two isoforms change with age, SM-2 expression increasing at the expense of SM-1. Applying a load on the wing increases the rate and extent of SM-1 replacement. Here we have demonstrated that decreasing the load by removal of the distal portion of the wing in 1-week-old chickens had an effect opposite to that of overloading in that it slowed muscle growth and the rate of SM-1 elimination. Experimental unloading of muscles previously weighted for 1 or 3 weeks slowed the growth rate of muscles, with consequent regression of relative hypertrophy; however, it did not lead to the reexpression of SM-1 myosin. This indicates that the overload-induced changes in myosin expression are not readily reversible. Nerve section produced unexpected results, in that it advanced the normal developmental shift in myosin expression toward predominance of the SM-2 isoform, similar to the effect of muscle overload.
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