|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Cloning of tropomodulin cDNA and localization of gene transcripts during mouse embryogenesis.

First Author  Ito M Year  1995
Journal  Dev Biol Volume  167
Issue  1 Pages  317-28
PubMed ID  7851652 Mgi Jnum  J:22993
Mgi Id  MGI:70861 Doi  10.1006/dbio.1995.1026
Citation  Ito M, et al. (1995) Cloning of tropomodulin cDNA and localization of gene transcripts during mouse embryogenesis. Dev Biol 167(1):317-28
abstractText  Tropomodulin (Tmod) is a tropomyosin-binding protein involved in the structuring of actin filaments. This report describes Tmod expression in distinct patterns during embryonic development in a wider variety of adult and embryonic vertebrate tissues than previously reported. Identical Tmod cDNAs were cloned from mouse brain, skeletal muscle, heart, and hematopoeitic cells. Genomic blotting demonstrates that Tmod is encoded by a single gene, which has a 1077-bp open reading frame that is highly homologous to that of the human erythrocyte. The spatial and temporal expression of the Tmod gene was examined during mouse embryogenesis using in situ hybridization. Tmod mRNA is present by 9.5 days postcoitum (p.c.) in the developing rostral somites, coincident with expression of contractile protein genes in myotomes, suggesting that Tmod may play an important role in sarcomeric thin filament organization in skeletal muscle. While the expression of Tmod mRNA in cardiac muscle is earlier than that in skeletal muscle, its appearance in the heart also coincides with the expression of genes for thin filament proteins and correlates with initial myocardial contractions at 8.0 days p.c. Tmod mRNA is not detected in developing smooth muscle of the gut, but Tmod mRNA is expressed in hematopoeitic cells in yolk sac and developing liver. The sensory ganglia and epithelia of the inner ear express Tmod mRNA as do other sensory neurons such as those in the olfactory epithelium. Expression levels in the brain are much lower prenatally than postnatally. These findings show that Tmod expression in many cell types is developmentally regulated, suggesting that the interaction of actin filaments with this tropomyosin binding protein is an important process in tissue and cell differentiation.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

6 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

24 Expression

Trail: Publication