Rescue of cardiac α-actin-deficient mice by enteric smooth muscle γ-actin
Abstract
The muscle actins in higher vertebrates display highly conserved amino acid sequences, yet they show distinct expression patterns. Thus, cardiac α-actin, skeletal α-actin, vascular smooth muscle α-actin, and enteric smooth muscle γ-actin comprise the major actins in their respective tissues. To assess the functional and developmental significance of cardiac α-actin, the murine (129/SvJ) cardiac α-actin gene was disrupted by homologous recombination. The majority (≈56%) of the mice lacking cardiac α-actin do not survive to term, and the remainder generally die within 2 weeks of birth. Increased expression of vascular smooth muscle and skeletal α-actins is observed in the hearts of newborn homozygous mutants and also heterozygotes but apparently is insufficient to maintain myofibrillar integrity in the homozygous mutants. Mice lacking cardiac α-actin can be rescued to adulthood by the ectopic expression of enteric smooth muscle γ-actin using the cardiac α-myosin heavy chain promoter. However, the hearts of such rescued cardiac α-actin-deficient mice are extremely hypodynamic, considerably enlarged, and hypertrophied. Furthermore, the transgenically expressed enteric smooth muscle γ-actin reduces cardiac contractility in wild-type and heterozygous mice. These results demonstrate that alterations in actin composition in the fetal and adult heart are associated with severe structural and functional perturbations.
Footnotes
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↵ ‡ To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Division of Developmental Biology, Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH 45229-3039. e-mail: james.lessard{at}uc.edu.
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James A. Spudich, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- ES cells,
- embryonic stem cells;
- α-MyHC,
- α-myosin heavy chain;
- HAT,
- hypoxanthine/aminopterin/thymidine;
- GAPDH,
- glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase;
- SMGA,
- smooth muscle γ-actin
- Copyright © 1997, The National Academy of Sciences of the USA








