학술논문

DYC-1, a Protein Functionally Linked to Dystrophin in Caenorhabditis elegansIs Associated with the Dense Body, Where It Interacts with the Muscle LIM Domain Protein ZYX-1
Document Type
Article
Source
Molecular Biology of the Cell; March 2008, Vol. 19 Issue: 3 p785-796, 12p
Subject
Language
ISSN
10591524; 19394586
Abstract
In Caenorhabditis elegans, mutations of the dystrophin homologue, dys-1, produce a peculiar behavioral phenotype (hyperactivity and a tendency to hypercontract). In a sensitized genetic background, dys-1mutations also lead to muscle necrosis. The dyc-1gene was previously identified in a genetic screen because its mutation leads to the same phenotype as dys-1,suggesting that the two genes are functionally linked. Here, we report the detailed characterization of the dyc-1gene. dyc-1encodes two isoforms, which are expressed in neurons and muscles. Isoform-specific RNAi experiments show that the absence of the muscle isoform, and not that of the neuronal isoform, is responsible for the dyc-1mutant phenotype. In the sarcomere, the DYC-1 protein is localized at the edges of the dense body, the nematode muscle adhesion structure where actin filaments are anchored and linked to the sarcolemma. In yeast two-hybrid assays, DYC-1 interacts with ZYX-1, the homologue of the vertebrate focal adhesion LIM domain protein zyxin. ZYX-1 localizes at dense bodies and M-lines as well as in the nucleus of C. elegansstriated muscles. The DYC-1 protein possesses a highly conserved 19 amino acid sequence, which is involved in the interaction with ZYX-1 and which is sufficient for addressing DYC-1 to the dense body. Altogether our findings indicate that DYC-1 may be involved in dense body function and stability. This, taken together with the functional link between the C. elegansDYC-1 and DYS-1 proteins, furthermore suggests a requirement of dystrophin function at this structure. As the dense body shares functional similarity with both the vertebrate Z-disk and the costamere, we therefore postulate that disruption of muscle cell adhesion structures might be the primary event of muscle degeneration occurring in the absence of dystrophin, in C. elegansas well as vertebrates.