Publication | Open Access
Overexpression of SMPX in Adult Skeletal Muscle Does not Change Skeletal Muscle Fiber Type or Size
14
Citations
18
References
2014
Year
Muscle FunctionCytoskeletonMechanotransductionOrthopaedic SurgeryCellular PhysiologyMuscle PhysiologyMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleBiomechanicsApplied PhysiologyFusion ProteinMatrix BiologyHealth SciencesMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologyCell BiomechanicsNeuromuscular PhysiologyCell BiologySmpx-egfp Fusion ProteinDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyMedicineSarcopenia
Mechanical factors such as stretch are thought to be important in the regulation of muscle phenotype. Small muscle protein X-linked (SMPX) is upregulated by stretch in skeletal muscle and has been suggested to serve both as a transcription factor and a mechanosensor, possibly giving rise to changes in both fiber size and fiber type. We have used in vivo confocal imaging to study the subcellular localization of SMPX in skeletal muscle fibers of adult rats using a SMPX-EGFP fusion protein. The fusion protein was localized predominantly in repetitive double stripes flanking the Z-disc, and was excluded from all nuclei. This localization would be consistent with SMPX being a mechanoreceptor, but not with SMPX playing a role as a transcription factor. In vivo overexpression of ectopic SMPX in skeletal muscle of adult mice gave no significant changes in fiber type distribution or cross sectional area, thus a role of SMPX in regulating muscle phenotype remains unclear.
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