A human beta-myosin heavy-chain gene was cloned, characterized, and demonstrated to be transcribed in both human heart and skeletal muscle.
Normal human heart and skeletal muscle
A human myosin heavy-chain gene, cloned in gamma Charon 4A phage (and as a clone designated lambda gMHC-1), was shown to code for a cardiac myosin heavy chain of the beta-type. The 5' end of the 14,200-base-pair genomic DNA clone is located in the head region of the myosin chain. The 3' end was shown to extent to the COOH terminus and includes the 3'-nontranslated sequence of the corresponding mRNA. The identification of lambda gMHC-1 as coding for a cardiac beta-myosin heavy chain was achieved by heteroduplex mapping using genomic cardiac myosin heavy-chain DNA of rabbit as a probe and, furthermore, by DNA sequence analysis of three selected subregions of the clones DNA including the 3'-nontranslated sequence. It was demonstrated by the S1 nuclease protection technique that the beta-myosin heavy-chain gene is transcribed in human heart muscle. In addition, we have found by the same technique that it is also expressed in human skeletal muscle.
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Peter Lichter
Goethe University Frankfurt
Patrick K. Umeda
Tokyo Medical and Dental University
J E Levin
European Journal of Biochemistry
University of Chicago
Max Planck Institute for Medical Research
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Lichter et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Normal human heart and skeletal muscle. A human beta-myosin heavy-chain gene was cloned, characterized, and demonstrated to be transcribed in both human heart and skeletal muscle.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0fa32e9e54838161fcfc8b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1986.tb09989.x
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