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Publication : Vertebrate isoforms of actin capping protein beta have distinct functions In vivo.

First Author  Hart MC Year  1999
Journal  J Cell Biol Volume  147
Issue  6 Pages  1287-98
PubMed ID  10601341 Mgi Jnum  J:58932
Mgi Id  MGI:1350695 Doi  10.1083/jcb.147.6.1287
Citation  Hart MC, et al. (1999) Vertebrate isoforms of actin capping protein beta have distinct functions In vivo. J Cell Biol 147(6):1287-98
abstractText  Actin capping protein (CP) binds barbed ends of actin filaments to regulate actin assembly. CP is an alpha/beta heterodimer. Vertebrates have conserved isoforms of each subunit. Muscle cells contain two beta isoforms. beta1 is at the Z-line; beta2 is at the intercalated disc and cell periphery in general. To investigate the functions of the isoforms, we replaced one isoform with another using expression in hearts of transgenic mice.Mice expressing beta2 had a severe phenotype with juvenile lethality. Myofibril architecture was severely disrupted. The beta2 did not localize to the Z-line. Therefore, beta1 has a distinct function that includes interactions at the Z-line. Mice expressing beta1 showed altered morphology of the intercalated disc, without the lethality or myofibril disruption of the beta2-expressing mice.The in vivo function of CP is presumed to involve binding barbed ends of actin filaments. To test this hypothesis, we expressed a beta1 mutant that poorly binds actin. These mice showed both myofibril disruption and intercalated disc remodeling, as predicted.Therefore, CPbeta1 and CPbeta2 each have a distinct function that cannot be provided by the other isoform. CPbeta1 attaches actin filaments to the Z-line, and CPbeta2 organizes the actin at the intercalated discs.
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