4.6 Article

Comprehensive analysis of titin protein isoform and alternative splicing in normal and mutant rats

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 113, Issue 4, Pages 1265-1273

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/jcb.23459

Keywords

TITIN ISOFORM TRANSITION; EXON SKIPPING; N2B; MIDDLE Ig AND PEVK

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL77196]
  2. Hatch [1556]
  3. College of Agricultural & Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Titin is a giant protein with multiple functions in cardiac and skeletal muscles. Rat cardiac titin undergoes developmental isoform transition from the neonatal 3.7?MDa N2BA isoform to primarily the adult 2.97?MDa N2B isoform. An autosomal dominant mutation dramatically altered this transformation. Titins from eight skeletal muscles: Tibialis Anterior (TA), Longissimus Dorsi (LD) and Gastrocnemius (GA), Extensor Digitorum Longus (ED), Soleus (SO), Psoas (PS), Extensor Oblique (EO), and Diaphram (DI) were characterized in wild type and in homozygous mutant (Hm) rats with a titin splicing defect. Results showed that the developmental reduction in titin size is eliminated in the mutant rat so that the titins in all investigated skeletal muscles remain large in the adult. The alternative splicing of titin mRNA was found repressed by this mutation, a result consistent with the large titin isoform in the mutant. The developmental pattern of titin mRNA alternative splicing differs between heart and skeletal muscles. The retention of intron 49 reveals a possible mechanism for the absence of the N2B unique region in the expressed titin protein of skeletal muscle. J. Cell. Biochem. 113: 12651273, 2012. (c) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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