BackgroundMethionine Sulfoxide Reductase A (MsrA), an enzyme in the Msr gene family, is important in the cellular anti-oxidative stress defense mechanism. It acts by reducing the oxidized methionine sulfoxide in proteins back to sulfide and by reducing the cellular level of reactive oxygen species. MsrA, the only enzyme in the Msr gene family that can reduce the S-form epimers of methionine sulfoxide, has been located in different cellular compartments including mitochondria, cytosol and nuclei of various cell lines.MethodsIn the present study, we have isolated a truncated form of the MsrA transcript from cultured mouse embryonic stem cells and performed eGFP fusion protein expression, confocal microscopy and real time RT-PCR studies.ResultsResults show a different expression response of this truncated transcript to oxygen deprivation and reoxygenation treatments in stem cells, compared to the longer full length form. In addition, a different subcellular localization pattern was noted with most of the eGFP fusion protein detected in the cytosol.ConclusionOne possibility for the existence of a truncated form of the MsrA transcripts could be that with a smaller protein size, yet retaining a GCWFG action site, this protein might have easier access to oxidize methionine residues on proteins than the longer form of the MsrA protein, thus having an evolutionary selection advantage. This research opens the door for further study on the role and function of the truncated MsrA embryonic mouse stem cells.
Ambystoma mexicanum is an intriguing animal model for studying heart development because it carries a mutation in gene c. Hearts of homozygous recessive (c/c) mutant embryos do not contain organized myofibrils and fail to beat. The defect can be corrected by organ-culturing the mutant heart in the presence of RNA from anterior endoderm or endoderm/mesoderm-conditioned medium. By screening a cDNA library made of total conditioned medium RNA from normal axolotl embryonic endoderm, we isolated a single clone (MIR), the synthetic RNA from which corrects the mutant heart defect by promoting myofibrillogenesis and thus was named MIR (myofibrillogenesis inducing RNA). In the present study, we have examined MIR gene expression in mutant axolotl hearts at early pre-heart-beat developmental stages and found its quantitative expression, as detected by RT-PCR, to be the same as in normal hearts. However, careful analysis of sequence data revealed a G-->U point mutation in the mutant MIR RNA. Further computational analyses, using GENEBEE software to compare normal and mutant MIR RNAs show a significant alteration in RNA secondary structure of the point-mutated MIR RNA. The results from bioassay and confocal microscopy immunofluorescent studies demonstrate that, unlike MIR RNA derived from normal embryos, the mutated MIR RNA does not promote myofibrillogenesis in mutant embryonic hearts and fails to rescue/correct the mutant heart defect.
The cardiomyopathic (CM) Syrian golden hamster (strain UM-X7.1) exhibits a hereditary cardiomyopathy, which causes premature death resulting from congestive heart failure. The CM animals show extensive cardiac myofibril disarray and myocardial calcium overload. The present study has been undertaken to examine the role of desmin phosphorylation in myofibril disarray observed in CM hearts. The data from skinned myofibril protein phosphorylation assays have shown that desmin can be phosphorylated by protein kinase C (PKC). There is no significant difference in the content of desmin between CM and control hamster hearts. However, the desmin from CM hearts has a higher phosphorylation level than that of the normal hearts. Furthermore, we have examined the distribution of desmin and myofibril organization with immunofluorescent microscopy and immunogold electron microscopy in cultured cardiac myocytes after treatment with the PKC-activating phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA). When the cultured normal hamster cardiac cells are treated with TPA, desmin filaments are disassembled and the myofibrils become disarrayed. The myofibril disarray closely mimics that observed in untreated CM cultures. These results suggest that disassembly of desmin filaments, which could be caused by PKC-mediated phosphorylation, may be a factor in myofibril disarray in cardiomyopathic cells and that the intermediate filament protein, desmin, plays an Important role in maintaining myofibril alignment in cardiac cells.
The Mexican axolotl, Ambystoma mexicanum, carries the naturally-occurring recessive mutant gene 'c' that results in a failure of homozygous (c/c) embryos to form hearts that beat because of an absence of organized myofibrils. Our previous studies have shown that a noncoding RNA, Myofibril-Inducing RNA (MIR), is capable of promoting myofibrillogenesis and heart beating in the mutant (c/c) axolotls. The present study demonstrates that the MIR gene is essential for tropomyosin (TM) expression in axolotl hearts during development. Gene expression studies show that mRNA expression of various tropomyosin isoforms in untreated mutant hearts and in normal hearts knocked down with double-stranded MIR (dsMIR) are similar to untreated normal. However, at the protein level, selected tropomyosin isoforms are significantly reduced in mutant and dsMIR treated normal hearts. These results suggest that MIR is involved in controlling the translation or post-translation of various TM isoforms and subsequently of regulating cardiac contractility.
Methionine sulfoxide reductase A (MsrA), a member of the Msr gene family, can reduce methionine sulfoxide residues in proteins formed by oxidation of methionine by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Msr is an important protein repair system which can also function to scavenge ROS. Our studies have confirmed the expression of MsrA in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in culture conditions. A cytosol-located and mitochondria-enriched expression pattern has been observed in these cells. To confirm the protective function of MsrA in ESCs against oxidative stress, a siRNA approach has been used to knockdown MsrA expression in ES cells which showed less resistance than control cells to hydrogen peroxide treatment. Overexpression of MsrA gene products in ES cells showed improved survivability of these cells to hydrogen peroxide treatment. Our results indicate that MsrA plays an important role in cellular defenses against oxidative stress in ESCs. Msr genes may provide a new target in stem cells to increase their survivability during the therapeutic applications.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.