1999
DOI: 10.1006/dbio.1999.9263
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Dystonin-Deficient Mice Exhibit an Intrinsic Muscle Weakness and an Instability of Skeletal Muscle Cytoarchitecture

Abstract: Dystonia musculorum (dt) was originally described as a hereditary sensory neurodegeneration syndrome of the mouse. The gene defective in dt encodes a cytoskeletal linker protein, dystonin, that is essential for maintaining neuronal cytoskeletal integrity. In addition to the nervous system, dystonin is expressed in a variety of other tissues, including muscle. We now show that dystonin cross-links actin and desmin filaments and that its levels are increased during myogenesis, coinciding with the progressive reo… Show more

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Cited by 69 publications
(78 citation statements)
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“…In muscle, dystonin was suggested to link actin filaments to desmin filaments [Dalpé et al, 1999]. This would fit well with its suggested roles in neurons and keratinocytes, and help account for intrinsic muscle weakness observed in the mice [Dalpé et al, 1999].…”
Section: Function Of Dystonin In Neurons and Musclementioning
confidence: 68%
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“…In muscle, dystonin was suggested to link actin filaments to desmin filaments [Dalpé et al, 1999]. This would fit well with its suggested roles in neurons and keratinocytes, and help account for intrinsic muscle weakness observed in the mice [Dalpé et al, 1999].…”
Section: Function Of Dystonin In Neurons and Musclementioning
confidence: 68%
“…Also, incomplete and sometimes erroneous descriptions of the Dst gene ( Fig. 1) have lead to conflicting reports regarding the function and nature of dystonin proteins [Yang et al, 1996;Dalpé et al, 1999;Leung et al, 1999].…”
Section: Function Of Dystonin In Neurons and Musclementioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Furthermore, patient studies suggest potential roles in neural development (Giorda et al, 2004;Vincent et al, 2008), human melanoma (Shimbo et al, 2010), and the infection process of Herpes virus (Pasdeloup, McElwee, Beilstein, Labetoulle, & Rixon, 2013). Finally, studies of dystonin mutant mice reveal further defects in glial cells (Bernier, De Repentigny, Mathieu, David, & Kothary, 1998;Saulnier, De Repentigny, Yong, & Kothary, 2002) potentially linking to multiple sclerosis (Laffitte et al, 2005), and neuromuscular junction defects associated with intrinsic muscle weakness (Boyer, Bernstein, & Boudreau-Larivière, 2010;Dalpe et al, 1999;Poliakova et al, 2014).…”
Section: Article In Pressmentioning
confidence: 99%