Y. Wakayama et al., Aciculin and its relation to dystrophin: immunocytochemical studies in human normal and Duchenne dystrophy quadriceps muscles, ACT NEUROP, 99(6), 2000, pp. 654-662
Aciculin is a novel adherens junction antigen extracted from human uterine
smooth muscle that is reported to associate biochemically with dystrophin.
We attempted to determine (i) the immunostainability of antiaciculin antibo
dy for the 6 histochemically normal human muscles and seven muscles from bo
ys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy(DMD) and 11 disease control muscles, (i
i) the ultrastructural localization of aciculin in normal skeletal myofiber
s, (iii) aciculin's spacial relationship with dystrophin and beta-spectrin,
and (iv) if the aciculin is ultrastructurally colocalized with dystrophin,
the distance from the aciculin epitope to the epitope of the dystrophin N-
or C-terminal domain. For this, rabbit anti-aciculin antibody was generate
d against the synthetic peptide of aciculin fragment D [4]. Immunohistochem
ical staining showed that the immunostainability of DMD muscles for anti-ac
iculin antibody was markedly decreased as compared with normal and disease
control muscles. Single and double immunogold labeling electron microscopy
of 6 histochemically normal human quadriceps femoris muscles revealed that
aciculin was present along the inner surface of muscle plasma membrane and
that aciculin formed doublets more frequently with dystrophin (2.35 +/- 1.8
%; group mean +/- SE) than with beta-spectrin (12.8 +/- 1.1%: P < 0.01 two
tailed t test). Rabbit anti-aciculin antibody frequently formed doublers wi
th monoclonal antibodies against the N- or C-terminal domain of dystrophin
at the muscle cell surface. These results suggest that aciculin is associat
ed with dystrophin and may interact with both the N- and C-terminal domains
of dystrophin.