“…An exception is the protein synemin. First identified as a high-molecular-mass protein associated with desmin and vimentin filaments in muscle (Granger and Lazarides, 1980), synemin expression was later detected in different tissues and cell types, including the nervous system, endothelial cells, retinal cells and hepatic stellate cells (Hirako et al, 2003;Izmiryan et al, 2006;Izmiryan et al, 2009;Izmiryan et al, 2010;Schmitt-Graeff et al, 2006;Tawk et al, 2003;Uyama et al, 2006). Three synemin isoforms differing in their C-terminal tails -a-synemin (also known as synemin H, 180 kDa), b-synemin (also known as synemin M, 150 kDa) and synemin L (41 kDa) -are produced by alternative splicing and are differentially regulated during embryonic development (Titeux et al, 2001;Xue et al, 2004).…”