Literature DB >> 16280346

Normal myoblast fusion requires myoferlin.

Katherine R Doherty1, Andrew Cave, Dawn Belt Davis, Anthony J Delmonte, Avery Posey, Judy U Earley, Michele Hadhazy, Elizabeth M McNally.   

Abstract

Muscle growth occurs during embryonic development and continues in adult life as regeneration. During embryonic muscle growth and regeneration in mature muscle, singly nucleated myoblasts fuse to each other to form myotubes. In muscle growth, singly nucleated myoblasts can also fuse to existing large, syncytial myofibers as a mechanism of increasing muscle mass without increasing myofiber number. Myoblast fusion requires the alignment and fusion of two apposed lipid bilayers. The repair of muscle plasma membrane disruptions also relies on the fusion of two apposed lipid bilayers. The protein dysferlin, the product of the Limb Girdle Muscular Dystrophy type 2 locus, has been shown to be necessary for efficient, calcium-sensitive, membrane resealing. We now show that the related protein myoferlin is highly expressed in myoblasts undergoing fusion, and is expressed at the site of myoblasts fusing to myotubes. Like dysferlin, we found that myoferlin binds phospholipids in a calcium-sensitive manner that requires the first C2A domain. We generated mice with a null allele of myoferlin. Myoferlin null myoblasts undergo initial fusion events, but they form large myotubes less efficiently in vitro, consistent with a defect in a later stage of myogenesis. In vivo, myoferlin null mice have smaller muscles than controls do, and myoferlin null muscle lacks large diameter myofibers. Additionally, myoferlin null muscle does not regenerate as well as wild-type muscle does, and instead displays a dystrophic phenotype. These data support a role for myoferlin in the maturation of myotubes and the formation of large myotubes that arise from the fusion of myoblasts to multinucleate myotubes.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16280346      PMCID: PMC4066872          DOI: 10.1242/dev.02155

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  62 in total

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4.  Plasma membrane repair is mediated by Ca(2+)-regulated exocytosis of lysosomes.

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5.  Synaptotagmin I functions as a calcium regulator of release probability.

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6.  Drosophila SNS, a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily that is essential for myoblast fusion.

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7.  Identical dysferlin mutation in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B and distal myopathy.

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  101 in total

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Review 5.  Plasma Membrane Repair: A Central Process for Maintaining Cellular Homeostasis.

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Review 7.  Rehabilitation and the single cell.

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