Literature DB >> 17971417

Absence of keratin 19 in mice causes skeletal myopathy with mitochondrial and sarcolemmal reorganization.

Michele R Stone1, Andrea O'Neill, Richard M Lovering, John Strong, Wendy G Resneck, Patrick W Reed, Diana M Toivola, Jeanine A Ursitti, M Bishr Omary, Robert J Bloch.   

Abstract

Intermediate filaments, composed of desmin and of keratins, play important roles in linking contractile elements to each other and to the sarcolemma in striated muscle. We examined the contractile properties and morphology of fast-twitch skeletal muscle from mice lacking keratin 19. Tibialis anterior muscles of keratin-19-null mice showed a small but significant decrease in mean fiber diameter and in the specific force of tetanic contraction, as well as increased plasma creatine kinase levels. Costameres at the sarcolemma of keratin-19-null muscle, visualized with antibodies against spectrin or dystrophin, were disrupted and the sarcolemma was separated from adjacent myofibrils by a large gap in which mitochondria accumulated. The costameric dystrophin-dystroglycan complex, which co-purified with gamma-actin, keratin 8 and keratin 19 from striated muscles of wild-type mice, co-purified with gamma-actin but not keratin 8 in the mutant. Our results suggest that keratin 19 in fast-twitch skeletal muscle helps organize costameres and links them to the contractile apparatus, and that the absence of keratin 19 disrupts these structures, resulting in loss of contractile force, altered distribution of mitochondria and mild myopathy. This is the first demonstration of a mammalian phenotype associated with a genetic perturbation of keratin 19.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17971417      PMCID: PMC9202444          DOI: 10.1242/jcs.009241

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cell Sci        ISSN: 0021-9533            Impact factor:   5.235


  62 in total

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6.  Biomechanics of the sarcolemma and costameres in single skeletal muscle fibers from normal and dystrophin-null mice.

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