Abstract

In adult Xenopus laevis, we analyzed, using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and in situ hybridization, the influence of long-term muscle denervation on the accumulation of MRF4 and myogenin transcripts. The brachial muscle was denervated by cutting the brachial nerve and was examined after 4 months. MRF4 mRNA levels decreased about two-fold in denervated muscle as compared with contralateral muscle. Myogenin mRNA levels, by contrast, were induced about five-fold by denervation. This report shows that muscle denervation persistently reduces the levels of MRF4 transcripts suggesting that MRF4 expression may be induced by innervation and hence may be involved in mediating transcriptional responses to innervation. The up-regulation of myogenin by denervation suggests that myogenin expression may compensate for the down-regulation of MRF4 gene.

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