MYOZ1 (FATZ) is a multivalent Z-disc scaffold protein that organizes the sarcomeric protein network and regulates calcium signaling during muscle differentiation and structural maintenance (PMID:10984498, PMID:36574402). It binds alpha-actinin-2 through its C-terminal region and integrates additional Z-disc components including gamma-filamin/ABP-L, telethonin, myotilin, and the filamin-C, -A, and -B isoforms, the latter linking the Z-disc to the sarcolemma via filamins and beta1 integrins (PMID:10984498, PMID:16076904). A conserved C-terminal class III PDZ-binding motif (E[ST][DE][DE]L) mediates interaction with the PDZ domains of Enigma-family proteins ZASP/Cypher, ALP, CLP-36, and RIL, and PKA phosphorylation of this C-terminus modulates these contacts (PMID:19047374). Structurally, MYOZ1 forms a tight fuzzy complex with alpha-actinin-2 as a conformational ensemble with a polar architecture that stabilizes alpha-actinin-2 orientation, and it can phase-separate with alpha-actinin-2 to form biomolecular condensates, providing a membraneless interaction hub during myofibrillogenesis (PMID:34049882). MYOZ1 abundance is controlled by the circadian E3 ligase FBXL21, which ubiquitinates it for proteasomal degradation in a manner accelerated by GSK-3beta; through this regulated turnover MYOZ1 inhibits calcineurin/NFAT signaling, and its accumulation upon FBXL21 loss impairs NFAT nuclear localization, NFAT target gene expression, myoblast differentiation, and sarcomere integrity (PMID:36574402).