Abstract

BackgroundCUG-BP and ETR-3-like factor (CELF) proteins regulate tissue- and developmental stage-specific alternative splicing in striated muscle. We previously demonstrated that heart muscle-specific expression of a nuclear dominant negative CELF protein in transgenic mice (MHC-CELFΔ) effectively disrupts endogenous CELF activity in the heart in vivo, resulting in impaired cardiac function. In this study, transgenic mice that express the dominant negative protein under a skeletal muscle-specific promoter (Myo-CELFΔ) were generated to investigate the role of CELF-mediated alternative splicing programs in normal skeletal muscle.Methodology/Principal FindingsMyo-CELFΔ mice exhibit modest changes in CELF-mediated alternative splicing in skeletal muscle, accompanied by a reduction of endomysial and perimysial spaces, an increase in fiber size variability, and an increase in slow twitch muscle fibers. Weight gain and mean body weight, total number of muscle fibers, and overall muscle strength were not affected.Conclusions/SignificanceAlthough these findings demonstrate that CELF activity contributes to the normal alternative splicing of a subset of muscle transcripts in vivo, the mildness of the effects in Myo-CELFΔ muscles compared to those in MHC-CELFΔ hearts suggests CELF activity may be less determinative for alternative splicing in skeletal muscle than in heart muscle. Nonetheless, even these small changes in CELF-mediated splicing regulation were sufficient to alter muscle organization and muscle fiber properties affected in myotonic dystrophy. This lends further evidence to the hypothesis that dysregulation of CELF-mediated alternative splicing programs may be responsible for the disruption of these properties during muscle pathogenesis.

Highlights

  • Pre-mRNA alternative splicing is a common mechanism for generating transcript and protein diversity

  • Conclusions/Significance: these findings demonstrate that CUG-BP and ETR-3-like factor (CELF) activity contributes to the normal alternative splicing of a subset of muscle transcripts in vivo, the mildness of the effects in Myo-CELFD muscles compared to those in MHC-CELFD hearts suggests CELF activity may be less determinative for alternative splicing in skeletal muscle than in heart muscle

  • These results indicate that the persistence of some CELF activity in postnatal heart muscle is critical for the maintenance of developmental stage-appropriate alternative splicing and healthy cardiac function

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Summary

Introduction

Pre-mRNA alternative splicing is a common mechanism for generating transcript and protein diversity. CELF1 and CELF2 protein levels are normally down-regulated in vertebrate heart and skeletal muscle shortly after birth [4,6]. This regulation occurs post-transcriptionally, involving destabilizing modifications of the CELF1 protein and microRNA-mediated repression of translation of CELF1 and CELF2 transcripts [7,8]. CUG-BP and ETR-3-like factor (CELF) proteins regulate tissue- and developmental stage-specific alternative splicing in striated muscle. We previously demonstrated that heart muscle-specific expression of a nuclear dominant negative CELF protein in transgenic mice (MHC-CELFD) effectively disrupts endogenous CELF activity in the heart in vivo, resulting in impaired cardiac function. Transgenic mice that express the dominant negative protein under a skeletal muscle-specific promoter (Myo-CELFD) were generated to investigate the role of CELF-mediated alternative splicing programs in normal skeletal muscle

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