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-myosin heavy chain mRNA but not its localization
Department of Physiology and Biophysics, College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60612
Mechanical inactivity depresses protein
expression in cardiac muscle tissue and results in atrophy. We explore
the mechanical transduction mechanism in spontaneously beating neonatal
rat cardiomyocytes expressing the
-myosin heavy chain (
-MyHC)
isoform by interfering with cross-bridge function
[2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM), 7.5 mM] without affecting
cell calcium. The polysome content and
-MyHC mRNA levels in
fractions from a sucrose gradient were analyzed. BDM treatment blocked
translation at initiation (162 ± 12% in the nonpolysomal RNA
fraction and 43 ± 6% in the polysomal fraction, relative to
control as 100%; P < 0.05). There
was an increase in
-MyHC mRNA from the nonpolysomal fraction (120.5 ± 7.7%; P < 0.05 compared with
control) with no significant change in the heavy polysomes. In situ
hybridization of
-MyHC mRNA was used to estimate message abundance
as a function of the distance from the nucleus. The mRNA was dispersed
through the cytoplasm in spontaneously beating cells as well as in
BDM-treated cells (no significant difference). We conclude that direct
inhibition of contractile machinery, but not calcium, regulates
initiation of
-MyHC mRNA translation. However, calcium, not pure
mechanical signals, appears to be important for message localization.
cardiac myocyte; polysomes; protein synthesis; mechanical signal transduction; atrophy
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