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© Research
Publication : The Journal of biological chemistry

The myosin alkali light chains of mouse ventricular and slow skeletal muscle are indistinguishable and are encoded by the same gene.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in The Journal of biological chemistry - 15 Jul 1985

Barton PJ, Cohen A, Robert B, Fiszman MY, Bonhomme F, Guénet JL, Leader DP, Buckingham ME

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 3839241

J Biol Chem 1985 Jul; 260(14): 8578-84

We have isolated a cDNA recombinant plasmid (pA29) identified as encoding part of the ventricular muscle myosin light chain MLC1v. This cDNA contains a 300-base pair fragment which under conditions of moderate stringency shows specific hybridization to MLC1v mRNA with no detectable cross-hybridization with the mRNAs encoding the fast skeletal muscle isoforms MLC1F and MLC3F, or the atrial muscle isoform MLC1A. Under these conditions hybridization is seen with an abundant mRNA present in slow skeletal muscle (soleus) which is indistinguishable from ventricular MLC1V mRNA on the basis of size and of thermal stability of hybrids formed with plasmid pA29. The mouse MLC1V and MLC1S proteins are found to co-migrate on two-dimensional gels. We therefore conclude that these isoforms are the same and are encoded by the same mRNA. Analysis of mouse DNA has identified a single region of the genome which hybridizes to this same fragment of pA29. This region has been isolated in a recombinant phage and has been shown to contain a single gene showing homology with MLC1V mRNA by R-loop analysis. We therefore conclude that MLC1V and MLC1S are encoded by a single gene. The pattern of segregation of a restriction fragment length polymorphism identified for this gene between Mus musculus and Mus spretus has been followed in an F1 backcross between these two mouse species. The results show the MLC1V/MLC1S gene to be closely linked to a marker at the distal end of mouse chromosome 9.