Abstract
Caveolae are specialised RAFTs (detergent-resistant membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol and glycosphingolipids). Caveolin, the main caveolae protein, is essential to the organisation of proteins and lipids, and interacts with numerous mediating proteins through a 'Caveolin Scalfolding Domain'. Consequently, caveolae play a major role in signal transduction and appear to be veritable signalling platforms. In muscle cells, caveolae are essential for fusion and differentiation, and are also implicated in a type of muscular dystrophy (LGMD1C). In a preceding work, we demonstrated the presence of active milli-calpain (m-calpain) in myotube caveolae. Calpains are calcium-dependent proteases involved in several cellular processes, including myoblast fusion and migration, PKC-mediated intracellular signalling and remodelling of the cytoskeleton. For the first time, we have proved the cholesterol-dependent localisation of m-calpain in the caveolae of C2C12 myotubes. Calpain-dependent caveolae involvement in myoblast fusion was also strongly suggested. Furthermore, eight differentially expressed caveolae associated proteins were identified by 2-DE and LC-MS/MS analyses using an m-calpain antisense strategy. This proteomic study also demonstrates the action of m-calpain on vimentin, desmin and vinculin in myotube caveolae and suggests m-calpain's role in several mitochondrial pathways. © 2007 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.
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Goudenege, S., Dargelos, E., Claverol, S., Bonneu, M., Cottin, P., & Poussard, S. (2007). Comparative proteomic analysis of myotube caveolae after milli-calpain deregulation. Proteomics, 7(18), 3289–3298. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.200700124
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