Isolation and partial cloning of ryanodine‐sensitive Ca2+ release channel protein isoforms from human myometrial smooth muscle
- 18 September 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in FEBS Letters
- Vol. 372 (1), 6-12
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0014-5793(95)00924-x
Abstract
Partial cDNAs of the ryanodine receptor were cloned using PCR analysis from reverse transcribed total and mRNA, extracted from freshly isolated pregnant, non‐pregnant, and cultured human myometrial smooth muscle. The identity of these clones was confirmed by nucleotide sequencing of the fragments and indicate the expression of both the skeletal and brain ryanodine receptor isoforms in these preparations. In freshly isolated non‐pregnant myometrial tissue, membrane fractions displaying specific [3H]ryanodine binding activities were isolated using density gradient centrifugation. SDS‐PAGE of the sucrose gradient fractions indicated the specific comigration of a polypeptide with a molecular mass of ∼ 544 kDa with the ryanodine binding activity.This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Excitation-contraction uncoupling and muscular degeneration in mice lacking functional skeletal muscle ryanodine-receptor geneNature, 1994
- Localization of a Novel Ryanodine Receptor Gene (RYR3) to Human Chromosome 15q14-q15 by in Situ HybridizationGenomics, 1993
- A novel ryanodine sensitive calcium release mechanism in cultured human myometrial smooth‐muscle cellsFEBS Letters, 1993
- Primary structure and distribution of a novel ryanodine receptor/calcium release channel from rabbit brainFEBS Letters, 1992
- Functional characterization of the Ca2+-gated Ca2+ release channel of vascular smooth muscle sarcoplasmic reticulumPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1991
- Oxytocin and vasopressin stimulate inositol phosphate production in human gestational myometrium and decidua cellsBioscience Reports, 1986
- Improved M13 phage cloning vectors and host strains: nucleotide sequences of the M13mpl8 and pUC19 vectorsGene, 1985
- Subunit structure of junctional feet in triads of skeletal muscle: a freeze-drying, rotary-shadowing study.The Journal of cell biology, 1984
- A Method for Isolation of Intact, Translationally Active Ribonucleic AcidDNA, 1983
- Cleavage of Structural Proteins during the Assembly of the Head of Bacteriophage T4Nature, 1970