Cited 62 times since 2005 (3.3 per year) source: EuropePMC Cardiovascular research, Volume 67, Issue 2, 1 1 2005, Pages 245-255 Activation of cardiac and smooth muscle-specific genes in primary human cells after forced expression of human myocardin. van Tuyn J, Knaän-Shanzer S, van de Watering MJ, de Graaf M, van der Laarse A, Schalij MJ, van der Wall EE, de Vries AA, Atsma DE

Objective

Myocardin is a recently discovered transcriptional regulator of cardiac and smooth muscle development. Its ability to transactivate smooth muscle-specific genes has been firmly established in animal cells but its effect on heart muscle genes has been investigated less extensively and the consequences of ectopic myocardin expression in human cells are unknown.

Methods

In this study, primary human mesenchymal stem cells and foreskin fibroblasts were transduced with human adenovirus vectors expressing the longest splice variant of the human myocardin gene (hAd5/F50.CMV.myocL) or with control vectors. One week later, the expression of muscle-restricted genes in these cells was analyzed by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reactions and immunofluorescence microscopy.

Results

Forced expression of myocardin induced transcription of cardiac and smooth muscle genes in both cell types but did not lead to activation of skeletal muscle-specific genes. Double labeling experiments using monoclonal antibodies directed against striated (i.e. sarcomeric alpha-actin and sarcomeric alpha-actinin) and cardiac (i.e. natriuretic peptide precursor A) muscle-specific proteins together with a polyclonal antiserum specific for smooth muscle myosin heavy chain revealed that hAd5/F50.CMV.myocL-transduced cells co-express heart and smooth muscle-specific genes.

Conclusions

These data indicate that the myocardin protein is a strong inducer of both smooth and cardiac muscle genes, but that additional factors are necessary to fully commit cells to either cardiac or smooth muscle cell fates.

Cardiovasc Res. 2005 8;67(2):245-255