1. Academic Validation
  2. Muscle lim protein isoform negatively regulates striated muscle actin dynamics and differentiation

Muscle lim protein isoform negatively regulates striated muscle actin dynamics and differentiation

  • FEBS J. 2014 Jul;281(14):3261-79. doi: 10.1111/febs.12859.
Elizabeth Vafiadaki 1 Demetrios A Arvanitis Vasiliki Papalouka Gerasimos Terzis Theodoros I Roumeliotis Konstantinos Spengos Spiros D Garbis Panagiota Manta Evangelia G Kranias Despina Sanoudou
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Molecular Biology Division, Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens, Greece.
Abstract

Muscle lim protein (MLP) has emerged as a critical regulator of striated muscle physiology and pathophysiology. Mutations in cysteine and glycine-rich protein 3 (CSRP3), the gene encoding MLP, have been directly associated with human cardiomyopathies, whereas aberrant expression patterns are reported in human cardiac and skeletal muscle diseases. Increasing evidence suggests that MLP has an important role in both myogenic differentiation and myocyte cytoarchitecture, although the full spectrum of its intracellular roles has not been delineated. We report the discovery of an alternative splice variant of MLP, designated as MLP-b, showing distinct expression in neuromuscular disease and direct roles in actin dynamics and muscle differentiation. This novel isoform originates by alternative splicing of exons 3 and 4. At the protein level, it contains the N-terminus first half LIM domain of MLP and a unique sequence of 22 Amino acids. Physiologically, it is expressed during early differentiation, whereas its overexpression reduces C2C12 differentiation and myotube formation. This may be mediated through its inhibition of MLP/cofilin-2-mediated F-actin dynamics. In differentiated striated muscles, MLP-b localizes to the sarcomeres and binds directly to Z-disc components, including α-actinin, T-cap and MLP. The findings of the present study unveil a novel player in muscle physiology and pathophysiology that is implicated in myogenesis as a negative regulator of myotube formation, as well as in differentiated striated muscles as a contributor to sarcomeric integrity.

Keywords

MLP; isoform; myotube differentiation; sarcomere; skeletal myopathy.

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