Recent reports have demonstrated the presence of two isoforms of troponin I in the human fetal heart, namely, cardiac troponin I and slow skeletal muscle troponin I. Structural and physiological considerations indicate that these isoforms would confer differing contractile properties on the myocardium, particularly on the phosphorylation-mediated regulation of contractility by adrenergic agonists. We have investigated the developmental expression of these isoforms in the human heart from 9 weeks of gestation to 9 months of postnatal life, using Western blots revealed with troponin I antibodies to detect troponin protein isoforms and Northern blots to detect the corresponding mRNAs. The results show the following: 1) Slow skeletal muscle troponin I is the predominant isoform throughout fetal life. 2) After birth, the slow skeletal isoform is lost, with cardiac troponin I being the only isoform detectable by 9 months of postnatal development. 3) The protein isoforms and their corresponding mRNAs follow the same pattern of accumulation, suggesting that the transition in troponin expression is regulated at the level of gene transcription. The developmental transition in troponin I isoform content has implications for contractility of the fetal and postnatal myocardium. We further analyzed right and left ventricular muscle samples from 17 hearts in end-stage heart failure resulting from pulmonary hypertension, ischemic heart disease, or dilated cardiomyopathy. Cardiac troponin I mRNA remained abundant in each case, and slow skeletal muscle troponin I mRNA was not detectable in any of sample. We conclude that alterations in troponin I isoform content do not therefore contribute to the altered contractile characteristics of the adult failing ventricle.
The differentiation of both original muscle fibres and the regenerated muscle fibres following necrosis in mdx muscles was investigated using immunoblotting and immunocytochemical procedures. Before the onset of necrosis, postnatal skeletal muscles in mdx mouse differentiated well with only a slight delay in differentiation indicated by the level of developmental isoforms of troponin T. Prior to the onset of apparent myopathic change, both fast and slow skeletal muscle fibre types in mdx leg muscles also differentiated well when investigated by analysis of specific myosin heavy chain expression pattern. While the original muscle fibres in mdx leg muscles developed well, the differentiation of regenerated myotubes into both slow and distinct fast muscle fibre types, however, was markedly delayed or inhibited as indicated by several clusters of homogeneously staining fibres even at 14 weeks of age. The number of slow myosin heavy chain-positive myotubes amongst the regenerated muscle clusters was quite small even in soleus. This study thus established that while muscle fibres initially develop normally with only a slight delay in the differentiation process, the differentiation of regenerated myotubes in mdx muscles is markedly compromised and consequently delayed.
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