1. Academic Validation
  2. Targeted ablation of the murine alpha-tropomyosin gene

Targeted ablation of the murine alpha-tropomyosin gene

  • Circ Res. 1997 Dec;81(6):1005-10. doi: 10.1161/01.res.81.6.1005.
E M Blanchard 1 K Iizuka M Christe D A Conner A Geisterfer-Lowrance F J Schoen D W Maughan C E Seidman J G Seidman
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Boston, Mass., USA.
Abstract

We created a mouse that lacks a functional alpha-tropomyosin gene using gene targeting in embryonic stem cells and blastocyst-mediated transgenesis. Homozygous alpha-tropomyosin "knockout" mice die between embryonic day 9.5 and 13.5 and lack alpha-tropomyosin mRNA. Heterozygous alpha-tropomyosin knockout mice have approximately 50% as much cardiac alpha-tropomyosin mRNA as wild-type littermates but similar alpha-tropomyosin protein levels. Cardiac gross morphology, histology, and function (assessed by working heart preparations) of heterozygous alpha-tropomyosin knockout and wild-type mice were indistinguishable. Mechanical performance of skinned papillary muscle strips derived from mutant and wild-type hearts also revealed no differences. We conclude that haploinsufficiency of the alpha-tropomyosin gene produces little or no change in cardiac function or structure, whereas total alpha-tropomyosin deficiency is incompatible with life. These findings imply that in heterozygotes there is a regulatory mechanism that maintains the level of myofibrillar tropomyosin despite the reduction in alpha-tropomyosin mRNA.

Figures