Neural influence on protein kinase C isoform expression in skeletal muscle.
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ABSTRACT: Protein kinase C (PKC) is a family of enzymes involved in synapse formation and signal transduction at the neuromuscular junction. Two PKC isoforms, classical PKC alpha and novel PKC theta, have been shown to be enriched in skeletal muscle or localized to the endplate. We examined the role of nerve in regulating the expression of these PKC isoforms in rat skeletal muscle by denervating diaphragm muscle and measuring PKC protein expression at various postoperative times. nPKC theta protein levels decreased 65% after denervation, whereas cPKC alpha levels increased 80% compared with control hemidiaphragms. These results suggest that innervation regulates PKC theta and alpha isoform expression in skeletal muscle. To explore further how nerve regulates PKC expression, we characterized PKC isoform expression in rat myotubes deprived of neural input. Myoblast expression of nPKC theta was low, and the increase in nPKC theta expression that occurred during differentiation into myotubes resulted in levels of nPKC theta significantly below adult skeletal muscle. cPKC alpha expression in myoblastic increased during differentiation to levels that exceeded expression in adult skeletal muscle. Coculturing myotubes within neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid clonal cell line (NG108-15) increased nPKC theta expression, but not cPKC alpha, suggesting that nPKC theta in skeletal muscle and myotubes is regulated by nerve contact or by a factor(s) provided by nerve. Treating myotubes with tetrodotoxin did not affect either basal- or NG108-15 cell-stimulated nPKC theta expression. Together these results suggest that expression of nPKC theta in skeletal muscle is regulated by a transynaptic interaction with nerve that specifically influences nPKC theta expression.
SUBMITTER: Hilgenberg L
PROVIDER: S-EPMC6579314 | biostudies-literature | 1996 Aug
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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