11 research outputs found
Signal enhancement at the electron microscopic level using Nanogold and gold-based autometallography
Mutations in the human a-tectorin gene cause autosomal dominant non- syndromic hearing impairment.
The tectorial membrane is an extracellular matrix of the inner ear that contacts the stereocilia bundles of specialized sensory hair cells. Sound induces movement of these hair cells relative to the tectorial membrane, deflects the stereocilia, and leads to fluctuations in hair-cell membrane potential, transducing sound into electrical signals. a-tectorin is one of the major non-collagenous components of the tectorial membrane. Recently, the gene encoding mouse a-tectorin (Tecta) was mapped to a region of mouse chromosome 9, which shows evolutionary conservation with human chromosome 11q (ref. 3), where linkage was found in two families, one Belgian (DFNA12; ref. 4) and the other, Austrian (DFNA8; unpublished data), with autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing impairment. We determined the complete sequence and the intron-exon structure of the human TECTA gene. In both families, mutation analysis revealed missense mutations which replace conserved amino-acid residues within the zona pellucida domain of TECTA. These findings indicate that mutations in TECTA are responsible for hearing impairment in these families, and implicate a new type of protein in the pathogenesis of hearing impairment
The regulation and action of myostatin as a negative regulator of muscle development during avian embryogenesis
AbstractMyostatin is a potent inhibitor of muscle growth. Genetic deletion of Myostatin leads to massive hyperplasia and hypertrophy of skeletal muscle. However, the overall muscle pattern is preserved. We show that, during chick embryonic development, Myostatin is expressed at stages and positions unlikely to influence qualitative muscle development. In the somites, Myostatin is predominantly expressed in a central domain of the dermomyotome but not at the dorsomedial and ventrolateral lips, where most cells for myotomal elongation are recruited. During limb bud development, Myostatin is transiently expressed at early stages in both myogenic and nonmyogenic regions. Myostatin is reexpressed during limb bud development at a time when splitting of muscle is underway. Heterotopically developed wing buds that fail to form muscle still express Myostatin. This demonstrates that, in the limb, not all Myostatin-expressing cells are of myogenic origin. Ectoderm and Sonic hedgehog have different effects on the expression of Myostatin dependent on stages at which the operation was performed and the length of the postoperative period. Finally, we show that application of Myostatin protein into the developing limb bud results in a down-regulation of Pax-3 and Myf-5, both genes associated with proliferation of myogenic cells; and, furthermore, Myostatin also prevents the expression of MyoD, a gene associated with muscle differentiation. The long-term effect of Myostatin treatment leads to a deficiency of limb muscle. Therefore, Myostatin negatively affects gene expression of transcription factors, which are necessary for establishing myogenic cell identity