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Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle

Caveolae are membrane invaginations present at high densities in muscle and fat. Recent work has demonstrated that myocardin family coactivators (MYOCD, MKL1), which are important for contractile differentiation and cell motility, increase caveolin (CAV1, CAV2, CAV3) and cavin (CAVIN1, CAVIN2, CAVIN...

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Autores principales: Zhu, Baoyi, Rippe, Catarina, Thi Hien, Tran, Zeng, Jianwen, Albinsson, Sebastian, Stenkula, Karin G., Uvelius, Bengt, Swärd, Karl
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28542204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176759
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author Zhu, Baoyi
Rippe, Catarina
Thi Hien, Tran
Zeng, Jianwen
Albinsson, Sebastian
Stenkula, Karin G.
Uvelius, Bengt
Swärd, Karl
author_facet Zhu, Baoyi
Rippe, Catarina
Thi Hien, Tran
Zeng, Jianwen
Albinsson, Sebastian
Stenkula, Karin G.
Uvelius, Bengt
Swärd, Karl
author_sort Zhu, Baoyi
collection PubMed
description Caveolae are membrane invaginations present at high densities in muscle and fat. Recent work has demonstrated that myocardin family coactivators (MYOCD, MKL1), which are important for contractile differentiation and cell motility, increase caveolin (CAV1, CAV2, CAV3) and cavin (CAVIN1, CAVIN2, CAVIN3) transcription, but several aspects of this control mechanism remain to be investigated. Here, using promoter reporter assays we found that both MKL1/MRTF-A and MKL2/MRTF-B control caveolins and cavins via their proximal promoter sequences. Silencing of MKL1 and MKL2 in smooth muscle cells moreover reduced CAV1 and CAVIN1 mRNA levels by well over 50%, as did treatment with second generation inhibitors of MKL activity. GATA6, which modulates expression of smooth muscle-specific genes, reduced CAV1 and CAV2, whereas the cavins were unaffected or increased. Viral overexpression of MKL1 and myocardin induced caveolin and cavin expression in bladder smooth muscle cells from rats and humans and MYOCD correlated tightly with CAV1 and CAVIN1 in human bladder specimens. A recently described activator of MKL-driven transcription (ISX) failed to induce CAV1/CAVIN1 which may be due to an unusual transactivation mechanism. In all, these findings further support the view that myocardin family coactivators are important transcriptional drivers of caveolins and cavins in smooth muscle.
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spelling pubmed-54445882017-06-12 Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle Zhu, Baoyi Rippe, Catarina Thi Hien, Tran Zeng, Jianwen Albinsson, Sebastian Stenkula, Karin G. Uvelius, Bengt Swärd, Karl PLoS One Research Article Caveolae are membrane invaginations present at high densities in muscle and fat. Recent work has demonstrated that myocardin family coactivators (MYOCD, MKL1), which are important for contractile differentiation and cell motility, increase caveolin (CAV1, CAV2, CAV3) and cavin (CAVIN1, CAVIN2, CAVIN3) transcription, but several aspects of this control mechanism remain to be investigated. Here, using promoter reporter assays we found that both MKL1/MRTF-A and MKL2/MRTF-B control caveolins and cavins via their proximal promoter sequences. Silencing of MKL1 and MKL2 in smooth muscle cells moreover reduced CAV1 and CAVIN1 mRNA levels by well over 50%, as did treatment with second generation inhibitors of MKL activity. GATA6, which modulates expression of smooth muscle-specific genes, reduced CAV1 and CAV2, whereas the cavins were unaffected or increased. Viral overexpression of MKL1 and myocardin induced caveolin and cavin expression in bladder smooth muscle cells from rats and humans and MYOCD correlated tightly with CAV1 and CAVIN1 in human bladder specimens. A recently described activator of MKL-driven transcription (ISX) failed to induce CAV1/CAVIN1 which may be due to an unusual transactivation mechanism. In all, these findings further support the view that myocardin family coactivators are important transcriptional drivers of caveolins and cavins in smooth muscle. Public Library of Science 2017-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC5444588/ /pubmed/28542204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176759 Text en © 2017 Zhu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhu, Baoyi
Rippe, Catarina
Thi Hien, Tran
Zeng, Jianwen
Albinsson, Sebastian
Stenkula, Karin G.
Uvelius, Bengt
Swärd, Karl
Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title_full Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title_fullStr Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title_full_unstemmed Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title_short Similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
title_sort similar regulatory mechanisms of caveolins and cavins by myocardin family coactivators in arterial and bladder smooth muscle
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5444588/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28542204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176759
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