Peptide growth factors can provoke "fetal" contractile protein gene expression in rat cardiac myocytes.
Open Access
- 1 February 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 85 (2) , 507-514
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci114466
Abstract
Cardiac-specific gene expression is intricately regulated in response to developmental, hormonal, and hemodynamic stimuli. To test whether cardiac muscle might be a target for regulation by peptide growth factors, the effect of three growth factors on the actin and myosin gene families was investigated by Northern blot analysis in cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. Transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF beta 1, 1 ng/ml) and basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF, 25 ng/ml) elicited changes corresponding to those induced by hemodynamic load. The "fetal" beta-myosin heavy chain (MHC) was up-regulated about four-fold, whereas the "adult" alpha MHC was inhibited greater than 50-60%; expression of alpha-skeletal actin increased approximately two-fold, with little or no change in alpha-cardiac actin. Thus, peptide growth factors alter the program of differentiated gene expression in cardiac myocytes, and are sufficient to provoke fetal contractile protein gene expression, characteristic of pressure-overload hypertrophy. Acidic FGF (25 ng/ml) produced seven- to eightfold reciprocal changes in MHC expression but, unlike either TGF-beta 1 or basic FGF, inhibited both striated alpha-actin genes by 70-90%. Expression of vascular smooth muscle alpha-actin, the earliest alpha-actin induced during cardiac myogenesis, was increased by all three growth factors. Thus, three alpha-actin genes demonstrate distinct responses to acidic vs. basic FGF.Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ca2+ and Na+ currents in developing skeletal myoblasts are expressed in a sequential program: reversible suppression by transforming growth factor beta-1, an inhibitor of the myogenic pathwayJournal of Neuroscience, 1989
- Epithelial-mesenchymal cell transformation in the embryonic heart can be mediated, in part, by transforming growth factor βDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- Transformation by activated ras or fos prevents myogenesis by inhibiting expression of MyoD1Cell, 1989
- Identification of a myocyte nuclear factor that binds to the muscle-specific enhancer of the mouse muscle creatine kinase gene.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1989
- INHIBITION OF MYOGENIC DIFFERENTIATION BY THE H-RAS ONCOGENE IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE DOWN REGULATION OF THE MYOD1 GENE1989
- Myogenin, a factor regulating myogenesis, has a domain homologous to MyoDCell, 1989
- Expression of transforming growth factor-beta 1 in specific cells and tissues of adult and neonatal mice.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- Decrease in transforming growth factor-beta binding and action during differentiation in muscle cells.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1988
- Mitogens and Oncogenes Can Block the Induction of Specific Voltage-Gated Ion ChannelsScience, 1987
- Control by fibroblast growth factor of differentiation in the BC3H1 muscle cell line.The Journal of cell biology, 1985