4.7 Article

Characterization of muscle ankyrin repeat proteins in human skeletal muscle

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 313, Issue 3, Pages C327-C339

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00077.2017

Keywords

single fibers; MARP; Ankrd 1; Ankrd 2; DARP; titin; protein quantification

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1085331]
  2. University of Auckland
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1085331] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Muscle ankyrin repeat proteins (MARPs) are a family of titin-associated, stress-response molecules and putative transducers of stretch-induced signaling in skeletal muscle. In cardiac muscle, cardiac ankyrin repeat protein (CARP) and diabetes-related ankyrin repeat protein (DARP) reportedly redistribute from binding sites on titin to the nucleus following a prolonged stretch. However, it is unclear whether ankyrin repeat domain protein 2 (Ankrd 2) shows comparable stretch-induced redistribution to the nucleus. We measured the following in rested human skeletal muscle: 1) the absolute amount of MARPs and 2) the distribution of Ankrd 2 and DARP in both single fibers and whole muscle preparations. In absolute amounts, Ankrd 2 is the most abundant MARP in human skeletal muscle, there being similar to 3.1 mu mol/kg, much greater than DARP and CARP (similar to 0.11 and similar to 0.02 mu mol/kg, respectively). All DARP was found to be tightly bound at cytoskeletal (or possibly nuclear) sites. In contrast, similar to 70% of the total Ankrd 2 is freely diffusible in the cytosol [including virtually all of the phosphorylated (p) Ankrd 2-Ser99 form], similar to 15% is bound to non-nuclear membranes, and similar to 15% is bound at cytoskeletal sites, likely at the N2A region of titin. These data are not consistent with the proposal that Ankrd 2, per se, or pAnkrd 2-Ser99 mediates stretch-induced signaling in skeletal muscle, dissociating from titin and translocating to the nucleus, because the majority of these forms of Ankrd 2 are already free in the cytosol. It will be necessary to show that the titin-associated Ankrd 2 is modified by stretch in some as-yet-unidentified way, distinct from the diffusible pool, if it is to act as a stretch-sensitive signaling molecule.

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