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Cavin4 interacts with Bin1 to promote T-tubule formation and stability in developing skeletal muscle

Authors :
Lo, Harriet P.
Lim, Ye Wheen
Xiong, Zherui
Martel, Nick
Ferguson, Charles
Ariotti, Nicholas
Giacomotto, Jean
Rae, James
Floetenmeyer, Matthias
Moradi, Shayli Varasteh
Gao, Ya
Tillu, Vikas A.
Xia, Di
Wang, Huang
Rahnama, Samira
Nixon, Susan J.
Bastiani, Michele
Day, Ryan D.
Smith, Kelly A.
Palpant, Nathan J.
Johnston, Wayne A.
Alexandrov, Kirill
Collins, Brett M.
Hall, Thomas E.
Parton, Robert G.
Lo, Harriet P.
Lim, Ye Wheen
Xiong, Zherui
Martel, Nick
Ferguson, Charles
Ariotti, Nicholas
Giacomotto, Jean
Rae, James
Floetenmeyer, Matthias
Moradi, Shayli Varasteh
Gao, Ya
Tillu, Vikas A.
Xia, Di
Wang, Huang
Rahnama, Samira
Nixon, Susan J.
Bastiani, Michele
Day, Ryan D.
Smith, Kelly A.
Palpant, Nathan J.
Johnston, Wayne A.
Alexandrov, Kirill
Collins, Brett M.
Hall, Thomas E.
Parton, Robert G.
Source :
Journal of Cell Biology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The cavin proteins are essential for caveola biogenesis and function. Here, we identify a role for the muscle-specific component, Cavin4, in skeletal muscle T-tubule development by analyzing two vertebrate systems, mouse and zebrafish. In both models, Cavin4 localized to T-tubules, and loss of Cavin4 resulted in aberrant T-tubule maturation. In zebrafish, which possess duplicated cavin4 paralogs, Cavin4b was shown to directly interact with the T-tubule–associated BAR domain protein Bin1. Loss of both Cavin4a and Cavin4b caused aberrant accumulation of interconnected caveolae within the T-tubules, a fragmented T-tubule network enriched in Caveolin-3, and an impaired Ca2+ response upon mechanical stimulation. We propose a role for Cavin4 in remodeling the T-tubule membrane early in development by recycling caveolar components from the T-tubule to the sarcolemma. This generates a stable T-tubule domain lacking caveolae that is essential for T-tubule function.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal of Cell Biology
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1343974750
Document Type :
Electronic Resource