Papers In Press, published online ahead of print October 18, 2007
J. Biol. Chem, 10.1074/jbc.M704392200
Submitted on May 29, 2007
Revised on October 4, 2007
Accepted on October 18, 2007
Divergent regulation of the sarcomere and the cytoskeleton
Galina Schevzov, Thomas Fath, Bernadette Vrhovski, Nicole Vlahovich, Sudarsan Rajan, Jeff Hook, Josephine E. Joya, Frances Lemckert, Franz Puttur, Jim J.-C. Lin, Edna C. Hardeman, David F. Wieczorek, Geraldine M. O'Neill, and Peter W. Gunning
Oncology Research Unit, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, NSW 2145
Corresponding Author: peterg3{at}chw.edu.au
The existence of a feed-back mechanism regulating the precise amounts of muscle structural proteins such as actin and the actin associated protein tropomyosin (Tm) in the sarcomeres of striated muscles is well-established. However, the regulation of nonmuscle or cytoskeletal actin and Tms in nonmuscle cell structures has not been elucidated. Unlike the thin filaments of striated muscles, the actin cytoskeleton in nonmuscle cells is intrinsically dynamic. Given the differing requirements for the structural integrity of the actin thin filaments of the sarcomere compared with the requirement for dynamicity of the actin cytoskeleton in nonmuscle cells, we postulated that different regulatory mechanisms govern the expression of sarcomeric vs cytoskeletal Tms, as key regulators of the properties of the actin cytoskeleton. Comprehensive analyses of tissues from transgenic and knock-out mouse lines that overexpress the cytoskeletal Tms, Tm3 and Tm5NM1, and a comparison with sarcomeric Tms, provides evidence for this. Moreover, we show that overexpression of a cytoskeletal Tm drives the amount of filamentous actin.