TY - JOUR
T1 - Skeletal muscle phenotypes initiated by ectopic MyoD in transgenic mouse heart
AU - Miner, J. H.
AU - Miller, J. B.
AU - Wold, B. J.
PY - 1992/4
Y1 - 1992/4
N2 - Forced expression of the myogenic regulatory gene MyoD in many types of cultured cells initiates their conversion into skeletal muscle. It is not known, however, if MyoD expression serves to activate all or part of the skeletal muscle program in vivo during animal development, nor is it known how limiting the influences of cellular environment may be on the regulatory effects of MyoD. To begin to address these issues, we have produced transgenic mice which express MyoD in developing heart, where neither MyoD nor its three close relatives - myogenin, Myf-5, and MRF4/herculin/Myf-6 - are normally expressed. The resulting gross phenotype in offspring from multiple, independent transgenic founders includes abnormal heart morphology and ultimately leads to death. At the molecular level, affected hearts exhibit activation of skeletal muscle-specific regulatory as well as structural genes. We conclude that MyoD is able to initiate the program that leads to skeletal muscle differentiation during mouse development, even in the presence of the ongoing cardiac differentiation program. Thus, targeted misexpression of this tissue-specific regulator during mammalian embryogenesis can activate, either directly or indirectly, a diverse set of genes normally restricted to a different cell lineage and a different cellular environment.
AB - Forced expression of the myogenic regulatory gene MyoD in many types of cultured cells initiates their conversion into skeletal muscle. It is not known, however, if MyoD expression serves to activate all or part of the skeletal muscle program in vivo during animal development, nor is it known how limiting the influences of cellular environment may be on the regulatory effects of MyoD. To begin to address these issues, we have produced transgenic mice which express MyoD in developing heart, where neither MyoD nor its three close relatives - myogenin, Myf-5, and MRF4/herculin/Myf-6 - are normally expressed. The resulting gross phenotype in offspring from multiple, independent transgenic founders includes abnormal heart morphology and ultimately leads to death. At the molecular level, affected hearts exhibit activation of skeletal muscle-specific regulatory as well as structural genes. We conclude that MyoD is able to initiate the program that leads to skeletal muscle differentiation during mouse development, even in the presence of the ongoing cardiac differentiation program. Thus, targeted misexpression of this tissue-specific regulator during mammalian embryogenesis can activate, either directly or indirectly, a diverse set of genes normally restricted to a different cell lineage and a different cellular environment.
KW - Heart
KW - MyoD
KW - Myogenesis
KW - Myogenin
KW - Skeletal muscle development
KW - Transgenic mice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0026577079&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
C2 - 1618148
AN - SCOPUS:0026577079
SN - 0950-1991
VL - 114
SP - 853
EP - 860
JO - Development
JF - Development
IS - 4
ER -