Drosophila indirect flight muscle specific Act88F actin mutants as a model system for studying congenital myopathies of the human ACTA1 skeletal muscle actin gene


Autoria(s): Haigh, Sarah E; Salvi, Sheetal S; Sevdali, Maria; Stark, Meg; Goulding, David; Clayton, Jonathan D; Bullard, Belinda; Sparrow, John C; Nongthomba, Upendra
Data(s)

01/06/2010

Resumo

Most human ACTA1 skeletal actin gene mutations cause dominant, congenital myopathies often with severely reduced muscle function and neonatal mortality. High sequence conservation of actin means many mutated ACTA1 residues are identical to those in the Drosophila Act88F, an indirect flight muscle specific sarcomeric actin. Four known Act88F mutations occur at the same actin residues mutated in ten ACTA1 nemaline mutations, A138D/P, R256H/L, G268C/D/R/S and R372C/S. These Act88F mutants were examined for similar muscle phenotypes. Mutant homozygotes show phenotypes ranging from a lack of myofibrils to almost normal sarcomeres at eclosion. Aberrant Z-disc-like structures and serial Z-disc arrays, ‘zebra bodies’, are observed in homozygotes and heterozygotes of all four Act88F mutants. These electron-dense structures show homologies to human nemaline bodies/rods, but are much smaller than those typically found in the human myopathy. We conclude that the Drosophila indirect flight muscles provide a good model system for studying ACTA1 mutations.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/29192/1/Gene.pdf

Haigh, Sarah E and Salvi, Sheetal S and Sevdali, Maria and Stark, Meg and Goulding, David and Clayton, Jonathan D and Bullard, Belinda and Sparrow, John C and Nongthomba, Upendra (2010) Drosophila indirect flight muscle specific Act88F actin mutants as a model system for studying congenital myopathies of the human ACTA1 skeletal muscle actin gene. In: Neuromuscular Disorders, 20 (6). pp. 363-374.

Publicador

Elsevier Science

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2010.03.008

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/29192/

Palavras-Chave #Molecular Reproduction, Development & Genetics (formed by the merger of DBGL and CRBME)
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed