Extraocular muscle is defined by a fundamentally distinct gene expression profile
- J. D. Porter†,‡,§,¶,
- S. Khanna†,
- H. J. Kaminski‡,§,
- J. S. Rao‖,
- A. P. Merriam†,
- C. R. Richmonds‡,
- P. Leahy‡‡,
- J. Li‖, and
- F. H. Andrade‡
- Departments of †Ophthalmology, ‡Neurology, §Neurosciences, and ‖Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and ‡‡The Comprehensive Cancer Center, Case Western Reserve University and The Research Institute of University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, OH 44106
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Edited by Louis M. Kunkel, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, and approved August 10, 2001 (received for review May 23, 2001)
Abstract
Skeletal muscle fibers are defined by patterned covariation of key traits that determine contractile and metabolic characteristics. Although the functional properties of most skeletal muscles result from their proportional content of a few conserved muscle fiber types, some, typically craniofacial, muscles exhibit fiber types that appear to lie outside the common phenotypic range. We analyzed gene expression profiles of three putative muscle classes, limb, masticatory, and extraocular muscle (EOM), in adult mice by high-density oligonucleotide arrays. Pairwise comparisons using conservative acceptance criteria identified expression differences in 287 genes between EOM and limb and/or masticatory muscles. Use of significance analysis of microarrays methodology identified up to 400 genes as having an EOM-specific expression pattern. Genes differentially expressed in EOM reflect key aspects of muscle biology, including transcriptional regulation, sarcomeric organization, excitation-contraction coupling, intermediary metabolism, and immune response. These patterned differences in gene expression define EOM as a distinct muscle class and may explain the unique response of these muscles in neuromuscular diseases.
Footnotes
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↵ ¶ To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Department of Ophthalmology, Case Western Reserve University, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-5068. E-mail: jdp7{at}po.cwru.edu.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
- Abbreviations:
- EOM,
- extraocular muscle;
- FDR,
- false discovery rate;
- SAM,
- significance analysis of microarray
- Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences





