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1.
Aberrant myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity is commonly observed with multiple cardiac diseases, especially familial cardiomyopathies. Although the etiology of the cardiomyopathies remains unclear, improving cardiac muscle Ca(2+) sensitivity through either pharmacological or genetic approaches shows promise of alleviating the disease-related symptoms. Due to its central role as the Ca(2+) sensor for cardiac muscle contraction, troponin C (TnC) stands out as an obvious and versatile target to reset disease-associated myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity back to normal. To test the hypothesis that aberrant myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity and its related function can be corrected through rationally engineered TnC constructs, three thin filament protein modifications representing different proteins (troponin I or troponin T), modifications (missense mutation, deletion, or truncation), and disease subtypes (familial or acquired) were studied. A fluorescent TnC was utilized to measure Ca(2+) binding to TnC in the physiologically relevant biochemical model system of reconstituted thin filaments. Consistent with the pathophysiology, the restrictive cardiomyopathy mutation, troponin I R192H, and ischemia-induced truncation of troponin I (residues 1-192) increased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of TnC on the thin filament, whereas the dilated cardiomyopathy mutation, troponin T ΔK210, decreased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of TnC on the thin filament. Rationally engineered TnC constructs corrected the abnormal Ca(2+) sensitivities of the thin filament, reconstituted actomyosin ATPase activity, and force generation in skinned trabeculae. Thus, the present study provides a novel and versatile therapeutic strategy to restore diseased cardiac muscle Ca(2+) sensitivity.  相似文献   

2.
Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) is caused by missense or premature truncation mutations in proteins of the cardiac contractile apparatus. Mutant proteins are incorporated into the thin filament or thick filament and eventually produce cardiomyopathy. However, it has been unclear how the several, genetically identified defects in protein structure translate into impaired protein and muscle function. We have studied the basis of FHC caused by premature truncation of the most frequently implicated thin filament target, troponin T. Electron microscope observations showed that the thin filament undergoes normal structural changes in response to Ca(2+) binding. On the other hand, solution studies showed that the mutation alters and destabilizes troponin binding to the thin filament to different extents in different regulatory states, thereby affecting the transitions among states that regulate myosin binding and muscle contraction. Development of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy can thus be traced to a defect in the primary mechanism controlling cardiac contraction, switching between different conformations of the thin filament.  相似文献   

3.
Missense mutations in the cardiac thin filament protein troponin T (TnT) are a cause of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC). To understand how these mutations produce dysfunction, five TnTs were produced and purified containing FHC mutations found in several regions of TnT. Functional defects were diverse. Mutations F110I, E244D, and COOH-terminal truncation weakened the affinity of troponin for the thin filament. Mutation DeltaE160 resulted in thin filaments with increased calcium affinity at the regulatory site of troponin C. Mutations R92Q and F110I resulted in impaired troponin solubility, suggesting abnormal protein folding. Depending upon the mutation, the in vitro unloaded actin-myosin sliding speed showed small increases, showed small decreases, or was unchanged. COOH-terminal truncation mutation resulted in a decreased thin filament-myosin subfragment 1 MgATPase rate. The results indicate that the mutations cause diverse immediate effects, despite similarities in disease manifestations. Separable but repeatedly observed abnormalities resulting from FHC TnT mutations include increased unloaded sliding speed, increased or decreased Ca(2+) affinity, impairment of folding or sarcomeric integrity, and decreased force. Enhancement as well as impairment of contractile protein function is observed, suggesting that TnT, including the troponin tail region, modulates the regulation of cardiac contraction.  相似文献   

4.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), characterized by cardiac dilatation and contractile dysfunction, is a major cause of heart failure. Inherited DCM can result from mutations in the genes encoding cardiac troponin T, troponin C, and alpha-tropomyosin; different mutations in the same genes cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. To understand how certain mutations lead specifically to DCM, we have investigated their effect on contractile function by comparing wild-type and mutant recombinant proteins. Because initial studies on two troponin T mutations have generated conflicting findings, we analyzed all eight published DCM mutations in troponin T, troponin C, and alpha-tropomyosin in a range of in vitro assays. Thin filaments, reconstituted with a 1:1 ratio of mutant/wild-type proteins (the likely in vivo ratio), all showed reduced Ca(2+) sensitivity of activation in ATPase and motility assays, and except for one alpha-tropomyosin mutant showed lower maximum Ca(2+) activation. Incorporation of either of two troponin T mutants in skinned cardiac trabeculae also decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force generation. Structure/function considerations imply that the diverse thin filament DCM mutations affect different aspects of regulatory function yet change contractility in a consistent manner. The DCM mutations depress myofibrillar function, an effect fundamentally opposite to that of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-causing thin filament mutations, suggesting that decreased contractility may trigger pathways that ultimately lead to the clinical phenotype.  相似文献   

5.
Cardiac muscle contraction depends on the tightly regulated interactions of thin and thick filament proteins of the contractile apparatus. Mutations of thin filament proteins (actin, tropomyosin, and troponin), causing familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC), occur predominantly in evolutionarily conserved regions and induce various functional defects that impair the normal contractile mechanism. Dysfunctional properties observed with the FHC mutants include altered Ca(2+) sensitivity, changes in ATPase activity, changes in the force and velocity of contraction, and destabilization of the contractile complex. One apparent tendency observed in these thin filament mutations is an increase in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development. This trend in Ca(2+) sensitivity is probably induced by altering the cross-bridge kinetics and the Ca(2+) affinity of troponin C. These in vitro defects lead to a wide variety of in vivo cardiac abnormalities and phenotypes, some more severe than others and some resulting in sudden cardiac death.  相似文献   

6.
Striated muscles are relaxed under low Ca(2+) concentration conditions due to actions of the thin filament protein troponin. To investigate this regulatory mechanism, an 11-residue segment of cardiac troponin I previously termed the inhibitory peptide region was studied by mutagenesis. Several mutant troponin complexes were characterized in which specific effects of the inhibitory peptide region were abrogated by replacements of 4-10 residues with Gly-Ala linkers. The mutations greatly impaired two of troponin's actions under low Ca(2+) concentration conditions: inhibition of myosin subfragment 1 (S1)-thin filament MgATPase activity and cooperative suppression of myosin S1-ADP binding to thin filaments with low myosin saturation. Inhibitory peptide replacement diminished but did not abolish the Ca(2+) dependence of the ATPase rate; ATPase rates were at least 2-fold greater when Ca(2+) rather than EGTA was present. This residual regulation was highly cooperative as a function of Ca(2+) concentration, similar to the degree of cooperativity observed with WT troponin present. Other effects of the mutations included 2-fold or less increases in the apparent affinity of the thin filament regulatory Ca(2+) sites, similar decreases in the affinity of troponin for actin-tropomyosin regardless of Ca(2+), and increases in myosin S1-thin filament ATPase rates in the presence of saturating Ca(2+). The overall results indicate that cooperative myosin binding to Ca(2+)-free thin filaments depends upon the inhibitory peptide region but that a cooperatively activating effect of Ca(2+) binding does not. The findings suggest that these two processes are separable and involve different conformational changes in the thin filament.  相似文献   

7.
Mutations in the gene encoding human cardiac troponin T can cause familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a disease that is characterized by ventricular hypertrophy and sudden, premature death. Troponin T is the tropomyosin-binding subunit of troponin required for thin filament regulation of contraction. One mutation, a change in the intron 15 splice donor site, results in two truncated forms of troponin T [Thierfelder et al. (1994) Cell 77, 701-712]. In one form, the mRNA skips exon 16 that encodes the C-terminal 14 amino acids; in the other, seven novel residues replace the exon 15- and 16-encoded C-terminal 28 amino acids. The two troponin T cDNAs were expressed in Escherichia coli for functional analysis. Both C-terminal deletion mutants formed a complex with cardiac troponin C and troponin I that exhibited the same concentration dependence as wild-type for regulation of the actomyosin MgATPase. However, both mutants showed severely reduced activation of the regulated actomyosin in the presence of Ca2+, though the inhibition in the absence of Ca2+ and the Ca(2+)-dependence of activation were not altered. The C-terminal deletions reduce the effectiveness of Ca(2+)-troponin to switch the thin filament from the "off" to the "on" state. Both mutant troponin Ts have reduced affinity for troponin I; the shorter mutant is at least 6-fold weaker than wild-type. The low level of activation of the ATPase would be consistent with reduced contractile performance, and the results suggest reduced troponin I affinity may be the molecular basis for the disease.  相似文献   

8.
To explore the functional consequences of a deletion mutation of troponin T (DeltaGlu160) found in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the mutant human cardiac troponin T, and wild-type troponins T, I, and C were expressed in Escherichia coli and directly incorporated into isolated porcine cardiac myofibrils using our previously reported troponin exchange technique. The mutant troponin T showed a slightly reduced potency in replacing the endogenous troponin complex in myofibrils and did not affect the inhibitory action of troponin I but potentiated the neutralizing action of troponin C, suggesting that the deletion of a single amino acid, Glu-160, in the strong tropomyosin-binding region affects the tropomyosin binding affinity of the entire troponin T molecule and alters the interaction between troponin I and troponin C within ternary troponin complex in the thin filament. This mutation also increased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the myofibrillar ATPase activity, as in the case of other mutations in troponin T with clinical phenotypes of poor prognosis similar to that of Glu160. These results provide strong evidence that the increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of cardiac myofilament is a typical functional consequence of the troponin T mutation associated with a malignant form of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.  相似文献   

9.
Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) is an inherited disease that is characterized by ventricular hypertrophy, cardiac arrhythmias and increased risk of premature sudden death. FHC is caused by autosomal-dominant mutations in genes for a number of sarcomeric proteins; many mutations in Ca(2+)-regulatory proteins of the cardiac thin filament are associated with increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of myofilament function. Computational simulations were used to investigate the possibility that these mutations could affect the Ca(2+) transient and mechanical response of a myocyte during a single cardiac cycle. We used existing experimental data for specific mutations of cardiac troponin I that exhibit increased Ca(2+) sensitivity in physiological and biophysical assays. The simulated Ca(2+) transients were used as input for a three-dimensional half-sarcomere biomechanical model with filament compliance to predict the resulting force. Mutations with the highest Ca(2+) affinity (lowest K(m)) values, exhibit the largest decrease in peak Ca(2+) assuming a constant influx of Ca(2+) into the cytoplasm; they also prolong Ca(2+) removal but have little effect on diastolic Ca(2+). Biomechanical model results suggest that these cTnI mutants would increase peak force despite the decrease in peak [Ca(2+)](i). There is a corresponding increase in net ATP hydrolysis, with no change in tension cost (ATP hydrolyzed per unit of time-integrated tension). These simulations suggest that myofilament-initiated hypertrophic signaling could be associated with decreased [Ca(2+)](i), increased stress/strain, and/or increased ATP flux.  相似文献   

10.
The key events in regulating cardiac muscle contraction involve Ca(2+) binding to and release from cTnC (troponin C) and structural changes in cTnC and other thin filament proteins triggered by Ca(2+) movement. Single mutations L29Q and G159D in human cTnC have been reported to associate with familial hypertrophic and dilated cardiomyopathy, respectively. We have examined the effects of these individual mutations on structural transitions in the regulatory N-domain of cTnC triggered by Ca(2+) binding and dissociation. This study was carried out with a double mutant or triple mutants of cTnC, reconstituted into troponin with tryptophanless cTnI and cTnT. The double mutant, cTnC(L12W/N51C) labeled with 1,5-IAEDANS at Cys-51, served as a control to monitor Ca(2+)-induced opening and closing of the N-domain by F?rster resonance energy transfer (FRET). The triple mutants contained both L12W and N51C labeled with 1,5-IAEDANS, and either L29Q or G159D. Both mutations had minimal effects on the equilibrium distance between Trp-12 and Cys-51-AEDANS in the absence or presence of bound Ca(2+). L29Q had no effect on the closing rate of the N-domain triggered by release of Ca(2+), but reduced the Ca(2+)-induced opening rate. G159D reduced both the closing and opening rates. Previous results showed that the closing rate of cTnC N-domain triggered by Ca(2+) dissociation was substantially enhanced by PKA phosphorylation of cTnI. This rate enhancement was abolished by L29Q or G159D. These mutations alter the kinetics of structural transitions in the regulatory N-domain of cTnC that are involved in either activation (L29Q) or deactivation (G159D). Both mutations appear to be antagonistic toward phosphorylation signaling between cTnI and cTnC.  相似文献   

11.
Understanding the effects of thin and thick filament proteins on the kinetics of Ca(2+) exchange with cardiac troponin C is essential to elucidating the Ca(2+)-dependent mechanisms controlling cardiac muscle contraction and relaxation. Unlike labeling of the endogenous Cys-84, labeling of cardiac troponin C at a novel engineered Cys-53 with 2-(4'-iodoacetamidoanilo)napthalene-6-sulfonic acid allowed us to accurately measure the rate of calcium dissociation from the regulatory domain of troponin C upon incorporation into the troponin complex. Neither tropomyosin nor actin alone affected the Ca(2+) binding properties of the troponin complex. However, addition of actin-tropomyosin to the troponin complex decreased the Ca(2+) sensitivity ( approximately 7.4-fold) and accelerated the rate of Ca(2+) dissociation from the regulatory domain of troponin C ( approximately 2.5-fold). Subsequent addition of myosin S1 to the reconstituted thin filaments (actin-tropomyosin-troponin) increased the Ca(2+) sensitivity ( approximately 6.2-fold) and decreased the rate of Ca(2+) dissociation from the regulatory domain of troponin C ( approximately 8.1-fold), which was completely reversed by ATP. Consistent with physiological data, replacement of cardiac troponin I with slow skeletal troponin I led to higher Ca(2+) sensitivities and slower Ca(2+) dissociation rates from troponin C in all the systems studied. Thus, both thin and thick filament proteins influence the ability of cardiac troponin C to sense and respond to Ca(2+). These results imply that both cross-bridge kinetics and Ca(2+) dissociation from troponin C work together to modulate the rate of cardiac muscle relaxation.  相似文献   

12.
The functional effects of two missense mutations in human cardiac troponin T, Phe110Ile and Glu244Asp, associated with familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy were examined by exchanging the bacterially expressed and purified mutant troponin T into rabbit cardiac skinned muscle fibers. Both mutations significantly increased the maximum force without affecting the cooperativity. The Glu244Asp mutation also increased the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the force generation, as in the case of other mutations associated with a poor prognosis. On the other hand, the Phe110Ile mutation, associated with a favorable prognosis, had no effect on the Ca(2+) sensitivity. The results strongly support the hypothesis that increased Ca(2+) sensitivity is responsible for the pathogenesis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with a poor prognosis caused by mutations in troponin T.  相似文献   

13.
Although it is established that familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) is caused by mutations in several sarcomeric proteins, including cardiac troponin T (TnT), its pathogenesis is still not completely understood. Previously, we established a transgenic rat model of FHC expressing a human TnT molecule with a truncation mutation (DEL-TnT). This study investigated whether contractile dysfunction and electrical vulnerability observed in DEL-TnT rats might be due to alterations of intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis, myofibrillar Ca(2+) sensitivity, and/or myofibrillar ATP utilization. Simultaneous measurements of the force of contraction and intracellular Ca(2+) transients were performed in right ventricular trabeculae of DEL-TnT hearts at 0.25 and 1.0 Hz. Rats expressing wild-type human TnT as well as nontransgenic rats served as controls. In addition, calcium-dependent ATPase activity and tension development were investigated in skinned cardiac muscle fibers. Force of contraction was significantly decreased in DEL-TnT compared with nontransgenic rats and TnT. Time parameters of Ca(2+) transients were unchanged at 0.25 Hz but prolonged at 1.0 Hz in DEL-TnT. The amplitude of the fura-2 transient was similar in all groups investigated, whereas diastolic and systolic fura-2 ratios were found elevated in rats expressing nontruncated human troponin T. In DEL-TnT rats, myofibrillar Ca(2+)-dependent tension development as well as Ca(2+) sensitivity of tension were significantly decreased, whereas tension-dependent ATP consumption ("tension cost") was markedly increased. Thus, a C-terminal truncation of the cardiac TnT molecule impairs the force-generating capacity of the cycling cross-bridges resulting in increased tension-dependent ATP utilization. Taken together, our data support the hypothesis of energy compromise as a contributing factor in the pathogenesis of FHC.  相似文献   

14.
Reversible Ca2+ binding to troponin is the primary on-off switch of the contractile apparatus of striated muscles, including the heart. Dominant missense mutations in human cardiac troponin genes are among the causes of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and dilated cardiomyopathy. Structural understanding of troponin action has recently advanced considerably via electron microscopy and molecular dynamics studies of the thin filament. As a result, it is now possible to examine cardiomyopathy-inducing troponin mutations in thin-filament structural context, and from that to seek new insight into pathogenesis and into the troponin regulatory mechanism. We compiled from consortium reports a representative set of troponin mutation sites whose pathogenicity was determined using standardized clinical genetics criteria. Another set of sites, apparently tolerant of amino acid substitutions, was compiled from the gnomAD v2 database. Pathogenic substitutions occurred predominantly in the areas of troponin that contact actin or tropomyosin, including, but not limited to, two regions of newly proposed structure and long-known implication in cardiomyopathy: the C-terminal third of troponin I and a part of the troponin T N terminus. The pathogenic mutations were located in troponin regions that prevent contraction under low Ca2+ concentration conditions. These regions contribute to Ca2+-regulated steric hindrance of myosin by the combined effects of troponin and tropomyosin. Loss-of-function mutations within these parts of troponin result in loss of inhibition, consistent with the hypercontractile phenotype characteristic of HCM. Notably, pathogenic mutations are absent in our dataset from the Ca2+-binding, activation-producing troponin C (TnC) N-lobe, which controls contraction by a multi-faceted mechanism. Apparently benign mutations are also diminished in the TnC N-lobe, suggesting mutations are poorly tolerated in that critical domain.  相似文献   

15.
We have studied functional consequences of the mutations R145G, S22A, and S23A of human cardiac troponin I (cTnI) and of phosphorylation of two adjacent N-terminal serine residues in the wild-type cTnI and the mutated proteins. The mutation R145G has been linked to the development of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Cardiac troponin was reconstituted from recombinant human subunits including either wild-type or mutant cTnI and was used for reconstitution of thin filaments with skeletal muscle actin and tropomyosin. The Ca(2+)-dependent thin filament-activated myosin subfragment 1 ATPase (actoS1-ATPase) activity and the in vitro motility of these filaments driven by myosin were measured as a function of the cTnI phosphorylation state. Bisphosphorylation of wild-type cTnI decreases the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the actoS1-ATPase activity and the in vitro thin filament motility by about 0.15-0.21 pCa unit. The nonconservative replacement R145G in cTnI enhances the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the actoS1-ATPase activity by about 0.6 pCa unit independent of the phosphorylation state of cTnI. Furthermore, it mimics a strong suppressing effect on both the maximum actoS1-ATPase activity and the maximum in vitro filament sliding velocity which has been observed upon bisphosphorylation of wild-type cTnI. Bisphosphorylation of the mutant cTnI-R145G itself had no such suppressing effects anymore. Differential analysis of the effect of phosphorylation of each of the two serines, Ser23 in cTnI-S22A and Ser22 in cTnI-S23A, indicates that phosphorylation of Ser23 may already be sufficient for causing the reduction of maximum actoS1-ATPase activity and thin filament sliding velocity seen upon phosphorylation of both of these serines.  相似文献   

16.
We generated a transgenic mouse model expressing the apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-causing mutation ACTC E99K at 50% of total heart actin and compared it with actin from patients carrying the same mutation. The actin mutation caused a higher Ca(2+) sensitivity in reconstituted thin filaments measured by in vitro motility assay (2.3-fold for mice and 1.3-fold for humans) and in skinned papillary muscle. The mutation also abolished the change in Ca(2+) sensitivity normally linked to troponin I phosphorylation. MyBP-C and troponin I phosphorylation levels were the same as controls in transgenic mice and human carrier heart samples. ACTC E99K mice exhibited a high death rate between 28 and 45 days (48% females and 22% males). At 21 weeks, the hearts of the male survivors had enlarged atria, increased interstitial fibrosis, and sarcomere disarray. MRI showed hypertrophy, predominantly at the apex of the heart. End-diastolic volume and end-diastolic pressure were increased, and relaxation rates were reduced compared with nontransgenic littermates. End-systolic pressures and volumes were unaltered. ECG abnormalities were present, and the contractile response to β-adrenergic stimulation was much reduced. Older mice (29-week-old females and 38-week-old males) developed dilated cardiomyopathy with increased end-systolic volume and continuing increased end-diastolic pressure and slower contraction and relaxation rates. ECG showed atrial flutter and frequent atrial ectopic beats at rest in some ACTC E99K mice. We propose that the ACTC E99K mutation causes higher myofibrillar Ca(2+) sensitivity that is responsible for the sudden cardiac death, apical hypertrophy, and subsequent development of heart failure in humans and mice.  相似文献   

17.
Defined as clinically unexplained hypertrophy of the left ventricle, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is traditionally understood as a disease of the cardiac sarcomere. Mutations in TNNC1-encoded cardiac troponin C (cTnC) are a relatively rare cause of HCM. Here, we report clinical and functional characterization of a novel TNNC1 mutation, A31S, identified in a pediatric HCM proband with multiple episodes of ventricular fibrillation and aborted sudden cardiac death. Diagnosed at age 5, the proband is family history-negative for HCM or sudden cardiac death, suggesting a de novo mutation. TnC-extracted cardiac skinned fibers were reconstituted with the cTnC-A31S mutant, which increased Ca(2+) sensitivity with no effect on the maximal contractile force generation. Reconstituted actomyosin ATPase assays with 50% cTnC-A31S:50% cTnC-WT demonstrated Ca(2+) sensitivity that was intermediate between 100% cTnC-A31S and 100% cTnC-WT, whereas the mutant increased the activation of the actomyosin ATPase without affecting the inhibitory qualities of the ATPase. The secondary structure of the cTnC mutant was evaluated by circular dichroism, which did not indicate global changes in structure. Fluorescence studies demonstrated increased Ca(2+) affinity in isolated cTnC, the troponin complex, thin filament, and to a lesser degree, thin filament with myosin subfragment 1. These results suggest that this mutation has a direct effect on the Ca(2+) sensitivity of the myofilament, which may alter Ca(2+) handling and contribute to the arrhythmogenesis observed in the proband. In summary, we report a novel mutation in the TNNC1 gene that is associated with HCM pathogenesis and may predispose to the pathogenesis of a fatal arrhythmogenic subtype of HCM.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of the familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutations, A13T, F18L, E22K, R58Q, and P95A, found in the regulatory light chains of human cardiac myosin has been investigated. The results demonstrate that E22K and R58Q, located in the immediate extension of the helices flanking the regulatory light chain Ca(2+) binding site, had dramatically altered Ca(2+) binding properties. The K(Ca) value for E22K was decreased by approximately 17-fold compared with the wild-type light chain, and the R58Q mutant did not bind Ca(2+). Interestingly, Ca(2+) binding to the R58Q mutant was restored upon phosphorylation, whereas the E22K mutant could not be phosphorylated. In addition, the alpha-helical content of phosphorylated R58Q greatly increased with Ca(2+) binding. The A13T mutation, located near the phosphorylation site (Ser-15) of the human cardiac regulatory light chain, had 3-fold lower K(Ca) than wild-type light chain, whereas phosphorylation of this mutant increased the Ca(2+) affinity 6-fold. Whereas phosphorylation of wild-type light chain decreased its Ca(2+) affinity, the opposite was true for A13T. The alpha-helical content of the A13T mutant returned to the level of wild-type light chain upon phosphorylation. The phosphorylation and Ca(2+) binding properties of the regulatory light chain of human cardiac myosin are important for physiological function, and alteration any of these could contribute to the development of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.  相似文献   

19.
The Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites (III and IV) located in the C-terminal domain of cardiac troponin C (cTnC) have been generally considered to play a purely structural role in keeping the cTnC bound to the thin filament. However, several lines of evidence, including the discovery of cardiomyopathy-associated mutations in the C-domain, have raised the possibility that these sites may have a more complex role in contractile regulation. To explore this possibility, the ATPase activity of rat cardiac myofibrils was assayed under conditions in which no Ca(2+) was bound to the N-terminal regulatory Ca(2+)-binding site (site II). Myosin-S1 was treated with N-ethylmaleimide to create strong-binding myosin heads (NEM-S1), which could activate the cardiac thin filament in the absence of Ca(2+). NEM-S1 activation was assayed at pCa 8.0 to 6.5 and in the presence of either 1mM or 30 μM free Mg(2+). ATPase activity was maximal when sites III and IV were occupied by Mg(2+) and it steadily declined as Ca(2+) displaced Mg(2+). The data suggest that in the absence of Ca(2+) at site II strong-binding myosin crossbridges cause the opening of more active sites on the thin filament if the C-domain is occupied by Mg(2+) rather than Ca(2+). This finding could be relevant to the contraction-relaxation kinetics of cardiac muscle. As Ca(2+) dissociates from site II of cTnC during the early relaxing phase of the cardiac cycle, residual Ca(2+) bound at sites III and IV might facilitate the switching off of the thin filament and the detachment of crossbridges from actin.  相似文献   

20.
The relationship between tropomyosin thermal stability and thin filament activation was explored using two N-domain mutants of alpha-striated muscle tropomyosin, A63V and K70T, each previously implicated in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Both mutations had prominent effects on tropomyosin thermal stability as monitored by circular dichroism. Wild type tropomyosin unfolded in two transitions, separated by 10 degrees C. The A63V and K70T mutations decreased the melting temperature of the more stable of these transitions by 4 and 10 degrees C, respectively, indicating destabilization of the N-domain in both cases. Global analysis of all three proteins indicated that the tropomyosin N-domain and C-domain fold with a cooperative free energy of 1.0-1.5 kcal/mol. The two mutations increased the apparent affinity of the regulatory Ca2+ binding sites of thin filament in two settings: Ca2+-dependent sliding speed of unloaded thin filaments in vitro (at both pH 7.4 and 6.3), and Ca2+ activation of the thin filament-myosin S1 ATPase rate. Neither mutation had more than small effects on the maximal ATPase rate in the presence of saturating Ca2+ or on the maximal sliding speed. Despite the increased tropomyosin flexibility implied by destabilization of the N-domain, neither the cooperativity of thin filament activation by Ca2+ nor the cooperative binding of myosin S1-ADP to the thin filament was altered by the mutations. The combined results suggest that a more dynamic tropomyosin N-domain influences interactions with actin and/or troponin that modulate Ca2+ sensitivity, but has an unexpectedly small effect on cooperative changes in tropomyosin position on actin.  相似文献   

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