Publication | Open Access
Overexpression of TEAD-1 in Transgenic Mouse Striated Muscles Produces a Slower Skeletal Muscle Contractile Phenotype
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Citations
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References
2008
Year
Muscle FunctionCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyMuscle PhysiologySignaling PathwayMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleMuscle-restricted Ha-tead-1 ExpressionCell SignalingHealth SciencesMechanobiologyMolecular PhysiologyTransgenic MouseGene ExpressionCell BiologyTea DomainDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionPhysiologyMechanical OverloadMedicineSarcopenia
TEA domain (TEAD) transcription factors serve important functional roles during embryonic development and in striated muscle gene expression. Our previous work has implicated a role for TEAD-1 in the fast-to-slow fiber-type transition in response to mechanical overload. To investigate whether TEAD-1 is a modulator of slow muscle gene expression in vivo, we developed transgenic mice expressing hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged TEAD-1 under the control of the muscle creatine kinase promoter. We show that striated muscle-restricted HA-TEAD-1 expression induced a transition toward a slow muscle contractile protein phenotype, slower shortening velocity (Vmax), and longer contraction and relaxation times in adult fast twitch extensor digitalis longus muscle. Notably, HA-TEAD-1 overexpression resulted in an unexpected activation of GSK-3alpha/beta and decreased nuclear beta-catenin and NFATc1/c3 protein. These effects could be reversed in vivo by mechanical overload, which decreased muscle creatine kinase-driven TEAD-1 transgene expression, and in cultured satellite cells by TEAD-1-specific small interfering RNA. These novel in vivo data support a role for TEAD-1 in modulating slow muscle gene expression.
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