Abstract
The Z-disc, appearing as a fine dense line forming sarcomere boundaries in striated muscles, when studied in detail reveals crosslinked filament arrays that transmit tension and house myriads of proteins with diverse functions. At the Z-disc the barbed ends of the antiparallel actin filaments from adjoining sarcomeres interdigitate and are crosslinked primarily by layers of α-actinin. The Z-disc is therefore the site of polarity reversal of the actin filaments, as needed to interact with the bipolar myosin filaments in successive sarcomeres. The layers of α-actinin determine the Z-disc width: fast fibres have narrow (∼30-50 nm) Z-discs and slow and cardiac fibres have wide (∼100 nm) Z-discs. Comprehensive reviews on the roles of the numerous proteins located at the Z-disc in signalling and disease have been published; the aim here is different, namely to review the advances in structural aspects of the Z-disc. © The Author(s) 2009.
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Luther, P. K. (2009). The vertebrate muscle Z-disc: Sarcomere anchor for structure and signalling. Journal of Muscle Research and Cell Motility, 30(5–6), 171–185. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10974-009-9189-6
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