Myoblast Fusion Promotes the Appearance of Active Protease Nexin I on Human Muscle Cell Surfaces

Experimental Cell Research(1996)

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摘要
Protease nexin I (PNI) is a 43- to 50-kDa glycoprotein capable of inhibiting a number of serine proteases and belongs to the serpin superfamily. PNI is identical to glia-derived nexin, a neurite outgrowth promoter by virtue of its thrombin-inhibiting activity. Of particular relevance to neuromuscular biology and pathology, PNI was the first serpin shown to be highly localized to the neuromuscular junction and it maps to precisely the same locus as autosomal recessive amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALSJ) at chromosome 2q33–35. In the present report, we now show that in cultures of human skeletal muscle, PNI protein is expressed only after myoblast fusion into multinuclear myotubes and is localized in patches on their surfaces. We performed complex formation experiments with labeled thrombin, another target protease for PNI, with intact human muscle cells in culture. We detected specific SDS-stable PNI/thrombin complexes in myotube extracts only, indicating that active PNI was bound to their surfaces. We studied the gene expression of PNI mRNA using a 300-bp cDNA synthesized from the published sequence of human PNI. Confirming the protein data, upregulation of PNI appears in myotubes using Northern blot analysis. The current results reinforce the hypothesis that the regulation of the balance of serine proteases and serpins, such as PNI, is involved in muscle differentiation. They also prompt us to explore PNI abnormalities in several neuromuscular diseases, including ALSJ.
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