Fresh insights into how our cells control muscle development could aid understanding of muscular dystrophy and other inherited diseases.

Scientists have discovered a way in which proteins in our cells help to control genes in our DNA, which are involved in forming muscle.

Their finding explains an apparent paradox in which proteins linked to a series of can be found in cells throughout the body, but impact only on some tissue types.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh studied newly discovered muscle-specific proteins, found in a membrane that surrounds the DNA in each of our cells—known as the nuclear membrane. Previous studies have linked other proteins in this membrane to inherited diseases that affect only some tissues.

They used gene analysis technologies and microscopes to determine how these proteins are able to change the physical position of important genes during . They discovered that this re-locating can regulate the genes' ability to form muscle.

When researchers blocked the proteins from functioning, muscle could not be formed, demonstrating the extent of the proteins' direct control.

Researchers say the newly found level of gene control is likely to apply to all tissues. It is expected to have implications for other tissue-specific conditions, such as fat, skin, bone and brain diseases, cardiomyopathy and an ageing disease known as progeria.

Their study is published in Molecular Cell.

Journal information: Molecular Cell