4.6 Article

Alternative splicing of (ppp1r12a/mypt1) in zebrafish produces a novel myosin phosphatase targeting subunit

Journal

GENE
Volume 675, Issue -, Pages 15-26

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2018.06.092

Keywords

Mypt1; PP1; Zebrafish; Splicing; Actomyosin; Myosin phosphatase; Convergent extension; Gastrulation

Funding

  1. NSF [IOS-1121310]
  2. NIH [R15GM124601]
  3. Early Award summer fellowships from the University of the Pacific

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Myosin phosphatase is an evolutionarily conserved regulator of actomyosin contractility, comprised of a regulatory subunit (Mypt1), and a catalytic subunit (PP1). Zebrafish has become an ideal model organism for the study of the genetic and cell physiological role of the myosin phosphatase in morphogenesis and embryonic development. We identified and characterized a novel splice variant of Mypt1 (ppp1r12a-tv202) from zebrafish, which is widely expressed during early embryonic development. Importantly, mutant alleles and antisense morpholinos that have been used to demonstrate the important role of Mypt1 in early development, not only disrupt the longer splice variants, but also tv202. The protein product of ppp1r12a-tv202 (Mypt1-202) contains the PP1-binding N-terminus, but lacks the regulatory C-terminus, which contains two highly conserved inhibitory phosphorylation sites. We observed that the protein product of tv202 assembled a constitutively active myosin phosphatase uninhibited by kinases such as Zipk. Thus, we propose that Mypt1-202 plays an important role in maintaining baseline M1c2 dephosphorylation and actomyosin relaxation during early zebrafish development.

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