Literature DB >> 26459831

In vivo dynamics of skeletal muscle Dystrophin in zebrafish embryos revealed by improved FRAP analysis.

Fernanda Bajanca1,2, Vinicio Gonzalez-Perez3, Sean J Gillespie3, Cyriaque Beley4,5, Luis Garcia4,5, Eric Theveneau2, Richard P Sear3, Simon M Hughes1.   

Abstract

Dystrophin forms an essential link between sarcolemma and cytoskeleton, perturbation of which causes muscular dystrophy. We analysed Dystrophin binding dynamics in vivo for the first time. Within maturing fibres of host zebrafish embryos, our analysis reveals a pool of diffusible Dystrophin and complexes bound at the fibre membrane. Combining modelling, an improved FRAP methodology and direct semi-quantitative analysis of bleaching suggests the existence of two membrane-bound Dystrophin populations with widely differing bound lifetimes: a stable, tightly bound pool, and a dynamic bound pool with high turnover rate that exchanges with the cytoplasmic pool. The three populations were found consistently in human and zebrafish Dystrophins overexpressed in wild-type or dmd(ta222a/ta222a) zebrafish embryos, which lack Dystrophin, and in Gt(dmd-Citrine)(ct90a) that express endogenously-driven tagged zebrafish Dystrophin. These results lead to a new model for Dystrophin membrane association in developing muscle, and highlight our methodology as a valuable strategy for in vivo analysis of complex protein dynamics.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dystrophin; FRAP; binding dynamics; cell biology; developmental biology; diffusion; muscle; software; stem cells; zebrafish

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26459831      PMCID: PMC4601390          DOI: 10.7554/eLife.06541

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Elife        ISSN: 2050-084X            Impact factor:   8.140


  68 in total

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5.  In vivo dynamics of skeletal muscle Dystrophin in zebrafish embryos revealed by improved FRAP analysis.

Authors:  Fernanda Bajanca; Vinicio Gonzalez-Perez; Sean J Gillespie; Cyriaque Beley; Luis Garcia; Eric Theveneau; Richard P Sear; Simon M Hughes
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2015-10-13       Impact factor: 8.140

Review 6.  The rise of photoresponsive protein technologies applications in vivo: a spotlight on zebrafish developmental and cell biology.

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