Switching of bovine cytochromec oxidase subunit VIa isoforms in skeletal muscle during development

Abstract
A cDNA encoding the liver isoform of bovine cytochromec oxidase subunit VIa (VIaL) was cloned from bovine liver RNA by reverse transcription and the polymerase chain reaction. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences show high conservation with the corresponding rat and human liver subunits. The sequence similarity between beef heart and beef liver VIa is 60%. Northern analyses of the steady-state levels of the VIa-heart (VIaH) and VIa-liver (VIaL) transcripts showed that adult liver and brain contained only VIaL transcripts, the VIaH transcript predominated in heart with a small amount of VIaL also present, while in adult skeletal muscle VIaH was present exclusively. The VIaL transcript was found in fetal heart and skeletal muscle from 104–215-day-old fetuses, in as much as 25% of the amount of VIaH transcript. The down-regulation of VIaL transcript in skeletal muscle at or close to birth may be correlated with a change in amount or cytochromec oxidase relative to thebc1 complex (complex III) observed spectrally when fetal and adult muscle samples were compared