نتایج جستجو برای: dystrophin

تعداد نتایج: 3503  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1995
A H Ahn L M Kunkel

Dystrophin, the protein product of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy locus, is a protein of the membrane cytoskeleton that associates with a complex of integral and membrane-associated proteins. Of these, the 58-kD intracellular membrane-associated protein, syntrophin, was recently shown to consist of a family of three related but distinct genes. We expressed the cDNA of human beta 1-syntrophin a...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2009
Elizabeth Stillwell Joseph Vitale Qingshi Zhao Amanda Beck Joel Schneider Farah Khadim Genie Elson Aneela Altaf Ghassan Yehia Jia-hui Dong Jing Liu Willie Mark Mantu Bhaumik Robert Grange Diego Fraidenraich

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an incurable neuromuscular degenerative disease, caused by a mutation in the dystrophin gene. Mdx mice recapitulate DMD features. Here we show that injection of wild-type (WT) embryonic stem cells (ESCs) into mdx blastocysts produces mice with improved pathology and function. A small fraction of WT ESCs incorporates into the mdx mouse nonuniformly to upregul...

Journal: :Indian pediatrics 2015
Rekha Mittal

Duchenne Muscular dystrophy (DMD) is caused by a mutation of the dystrophin gene – the largest human gene, with 79 exons – located at p21 on the X chromosome. Mutations of the dystrophin gene include deletions in 60% of the cases, duplications in 5-10% and point mutations in the rest [1]. A variation in the mutation can result in a milder form of the disease – Becker muscle dystrophy (BMD) – wh...

2005
Rhea Klietsch James M. Ervasti

The expression and subcellular distribution of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex and laminin were examined in cardiac muscle by immunoblot and immunofluorescence analysis of rabbit and sheep papillary muscle. The five dystrophin-associated proteins (DAPs), 156-DAG, 59-DAP, 50-DAG, 43-DAG, and 35-DAG, were identified in rabbit ventricular muscle and found to codistribute with dystrophin in bot...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2000
Gregory E. Crawford John A. Faulkner Rachelle H. Crosbie Kevin P. Campbell Stanley C. Froehner Jeffrey S. Chamberlain

Dystrophin is a multidomain protein that links the actin cytoskeleton to laminin in the extracellular matrix through the dystrophin associated protein (DAP) complex. The COOH-terminal domain of dystrophin binds to two components of the DAP complex, syntrophin and dystrobrevin. To understand the role of syntrophin and dystrobrevin, we previously generated a series of transgenic mouse lines expre...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 1992
H B Peng Q Chen

The distribution of dystrophin in Xenopus myotomal muscle cells was examined in conventional and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy. By labeling dissociated single muscle fibers with a monoclonal or a polyclonal antibody against dystrophin, we found that dystrophin is ten times more concentrated at the myotendinous junction (MTJ) than at the extrajunctional sarcolemma. At the MTJ, dystrophi...

2008
Maziar Assadi Thomas Schindler John D. Porter Hanno Langen

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is caused by the absence of the protein dystrophin in the muscle cells. The function of dystrophin is still not clear. For enabling study of the molecular function of dystrophin, we used small inhibitory RNA (siRNA) for suppressing the expression of the protein in two muscle cell lines and achieved a quantitative knockdown. We applied two-dimensional differenti...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1995
C Pasternak S Wong E L Elson

We have directly measured the contribution of dystrophin to the cortical stiffness of living muscle cells and have demonstrated that lack of dystrophin causes a substantial reduction in stiffness. The inferred molecular structure of dystrophin, its preferential localization underlying the cell surface, and the apparent fragility of muscle cells which lack this protein suggest that dystrophin st...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2004
Yves De Repentigny Philip Marshall Ronald G Worton Rashmi Kothary

A subset of patients harboring mutations in the dystrophin gene suffer from X-linked dilated cardiomyopathy (XLCM), a familial heart disease that is not accompanied by any clinical signs of skeletal muscle myopathy. As the muscle (M) isoform of dystrophin is not expressed in these patients, the absence of skeletal muscle symptoms has been attributed to expression of the brain (B) and cerebellar...

2014
Chantal Beekman Jessica A. Sipkens Janwillem Testerink Stavros Giannakopoulos Dyonne Kreuger Judith C. van Deutekom Giles V. Campion Sjef J. de Kimpe Afrodite Lourbakos James M. Ervasti

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is characterized by the absence or reduced levels of dystrophin expression on the inner surface of the sarcolemmal membrane of muscle fibers. Clinical development of therapeutic approaches aiming to increase dystrophin levels requires sensitive and reproducible measurement of differences in dystrophin expression in muscle biopsies of treated patients with DMD. ...

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