Abstract

Myogenic regulatory factors (MRFs) are vital transcription factors that act at multiple points during development to establish the skeletal muscle phenotype. This class of muscle-restricted, basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins acts in concert with additional transcriptional modulators to precisely control muscle gene expression. We have isolated the chicken homologue of Tax responsive element binding protein 107 (TaxREB107). The cDNA is 83% homologous at the amino acid level to human and mouse TaxREB107 and contains a centrally located leucine zipper motif. Northern analysis demonstrated that the gene is expressed in multiple tissues including skeletal muscle. Immunofluorescent staining revealed that the cTaxREB107 protein is located in both the nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. Distinct localization to the nucleoli supports the evidence that TaxREB107 is a ribosomal protein. Because TaxREB proteins also are implicated in transcriptional regulation, we overexpressed cTaxREB107 in embryonic myoblasts. cTaxREB107 increased troponin I reporter gene activity as well as MRF-directed transcription from a multimerized skeletal muscle E-box reporter gene (4Rtk-luc). However, cotransfection of expression plasmids coding for MyoD and cTaxREB107 did not produce an increase in 4Rtk-luc suggesting that cTaxREB107 enhances myogenic gene transcription through a means independent of a physical association with MyoD. In conclusion, our results define a role for cTaxREB107 during avian myogenesis as a positive modulator of skeletal muscle gene expression.

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