Comparison of myosins from the masseter muscle of adult rat, mouse and guinea-pig. Persistence of neonatal-type isoforms in the murine muscle

Abstract
Adult rat, mouse, and guinea-pig masseter muscles display distinct myosin electrophoretic patterns. The rat muscle contains four main forms which by reference to the myosins of the IIB tensor fasciae latae, of the IIA mylohyoid, and of the red and white portions of the sternomastoid muscles, correspond respectively to the intermediate-type and to the three fast-type isoforms. The mouse masseter muscle contains only three main myosins, the intermediate-type and two fast-type isoforms. The guinea-pig muscle also displays only three bands, whose assignment is, however, less straightforward than in the murine species; their electrophoretic mobilities are not strictly the same as those of their homologous forms in rats and mouse. Comparison with the myosins of the tensor fasciae latae and of the sternomastoid muscles of guinea-pig allows their identification as intermediate and fast-type myosins. In addition to these typical adult-type forms, adult murine masseter muscles are observed to contain between zero and 30% of neonatal-type myosins. The comparison of the developmental transitions of myosins in the rat masseter with those in the skeletal muscles of the same animal indicates a delay in the appearance of the adult as well as in the disappearance of the neonatal-type myosins in the masseter muscle. Both the variability in myosin types with the animal species and the atypical presence of neonatal forms in the murine adults suggest that myosin expression in the masseter muscle is subjected to unusual regulations.