4.6 Article

Genetic dissection of novel myopathy models reveals a role of CapZa and Leiomodin 3 during myofibril elongation

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PLOS GENETICS
卷 18, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1010066

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  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [APP1144159, APP21145821]
  2. Angior Family Foundation
  3. State Government of Victoria
  4. Australian Government

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Sarcomere assembly is a complex process involving filament capping proteins. CapZ proteins, Lmod proteins, and Tmod proteins play different roles in thin filament assembly. Zebrafish mutants with deficiencies in these capping proteins exhibited sarcomere defects, suggesting their involvement in myofibril growth. However, the presence of residual organized sarcomeres in the mutants indicates that these proteins are not essential for initial myofibril assembly.
Myofibrils within skeletal muscle are composed of sarcomeres that generate force by contraction when their myosin-rich thick filaments slide past actin-based thin filaments. Although mutations in components of the sarcomere are a major cause of human disease, the highly complex process of sarcomere assembly is not fully understood. Current models of thin filament assembly highlight a central role for filament capping proteins, which can be divided into three protein families, each ascribed with separate roles in thin filament assembly. CapZ proteins have been shown to bind the Z-disc protein alpha-actinin to form an anchoring complex for thin filaments and actin polymerisation. Subsequent thin filaments extension dynamics are thought to be facilitated by Leiomodins (Lmods) and thin filament assembly is concluded by Tropomodulins (Tmods) that specifically cap the pointed end of thin filaments. To study thin filament assembly in vivo, single and compound loss-of-function zebrafish mutants within distinct classes of capping proteins were analysed. The generated lmod3- and capza1b-deficient zebrafish exhibited aspects of the pathology caused by variations in their human orthologs. Although loss of the analysed main capping proteins of the skeletal muscle, capza1b, capza1a, lmod3 and tmod4, resulted in sarcomere defects, residual organised sarcomeres were formed within the assessed mutants, indicating that these proteins are not essential for the initial myofibril assembly. Furthermore, detected similarity and location of myofibril defects, apparent at the peripheral ends of myofibres of both Lmod3- and CapZa-deficient mutants, suggest a function in longitudinal myofibril growth for both proteins, which is molecularly distinct to the function of Tmod4.

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