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1.
In this study we investigated the physiological role of the cardiac troponin T (cTnT) isoforms in the presence of human slow skeletal troponin I (ssTnI). ssTnI is the main troponin I isoform in the fetal human heart. In reconstituted fibers containing the cTnT isoforms in the presence of ssTnI, cTnT1-containing fibers showed increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development compared with cTnT3- and cTnT4-containing fibers. The maximal force in reconstituted skinned fibers was significantly greater for the cTnT1 (predominant fetal cTnT isoform) when compared with cTnT3 (adult TnT isoform) in the presence of ssTnI. Troponin (Tn) complexes containing ssTnI and reconstituted with cTnT isoforms all yielded different maximal actomyosin ATPase activities. Tn complexes containing cTnT1 and cTnT4 (both fetal isoforms) had a reduced ability to inhibit actomyosin ATPase activity when compared with cTnT3 (adult isoform) in the presence of ssTnI. The rate at which Ca(2+) was released from site II of cTnC in the cTnI.cTnC complex (122/s) was 12.5-fold faster than for the ssTnI.cTnC complex (9.8/s). Addition of cTnT3 to the cTnI.cTnC complex resulted in a 3.6-fold decrease in the Ca(2+) dissociation rate from site II of cTnC. Addition of cTnT3 to the ssTnI.cTnC complex resulted in a 1.9-fold increase in the Ca(2+) dissociation rate from site II of cTnC. The rate at which Ca(2+) dissociated from site II of cTnC in Tn complexes also depended on the cTnT isoform present. However, the TnI isoforms had greater effects on the Ca(2+) dissociation rate of site II than the cTnT isoforms. These results suggest that the different N-terminal TnT isoforms would produce distinct functional properties in the presence of ssTnI when compared with cTnI and that each isoform would have a specific physiological role in cardiac muscle.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
We describe a method for the removal of endogenous troponin (Tn) complex from bundles of detergent-treated cardiac fibers. After 70 min treatment with cTnT-cTnI most of the endogenous Tn complex was removed from fiber bundles. Complete reconstitution of the Tn complex was achieved by reconstituting with cardiac troponin C (cTnC) in fully relaxing conditions. Ca(2+)-dependent maximum force of the fibers treated with cTnT-cTnI or cTnT-cTnI(33-211), which was used to aid in the visualization of the troponin exchange, decreased to 85-90% of the force developed by fibers before the treatment. SDS-PAGE analysis of the cTnT-cTnI(33-211) and the cTnT(77-289)-cTnI(33-211) treated fiber bundles demonstrated that 70-80% of the endogenous Tn subunits were removed. After reconstitution with cTnC, approximately 80-85% of the Ca(2+)-regulated force was restored in cTnT-cTnI/cTnI(33-211) treated fibers. Our results demonstrate that by minimizing the prolonged exposure of skinned cardiac fiber bundles to rigor conditions, successful exchange of all three subunits of the Tn complex can be accomplished with minimal loss of function.  相似文献   

4.
Restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) is a rare disorder characterized by impaired ventricular filling with decreased diastolic volume. We are reporting the functional effects of the first cardiac troponin T (CTnT) mutation linked to infantile RCM resulting from a de novo deletion mutation of glutamic acid 96. The mutation was introduced into adult and fetal isoforms of human cardiac TnT (HCTnT3-DeltaE96 and HCTnT1-DeltaE106, respectively) and studied with either cardiac troponin I (CTnI) or slow skeletal troponin I (SSTnI). Skinned cardiac fiber measurements showed a large leftward shift in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development with no differences in the maximal force. HCTnT1-DeltaE106 showed a significant increase in the activation of actomyosin ATPase with either CTnI or SSTnI, whereas HCTnT3-DeltaE96 was only able to increase the ATPase activity with CTnI. Both mutants showed an impaired ability to inhibit the ATPase activity. The capacity of the CTnI.CTnC and SSTnI.CTnC complexes to fully relax the fibers after TnT displacement was also compromised. Experiments performed using fetal troponin isoforms showed a less severe impact compared with the adult isoforms, which is consistent with the cardioprotective role of SSTnI and the rapid onset of RCM after birth following the isoform switch. These data indicate that troponin mutations related to RCM may have specific functional phenotypes, including large leftward shifts in the Ca(2+) sensitivity and impaired abilities to inhibit ATPase and to relax skinned fibers. All of this would account for and contribute to the severe diastolic dysfunction seen in RCM.  相似文献   

5.
Transgenic mice expressing an allele of cardiac troponin T (cTnT) with a COOH-terminal truncation (cTnT(trunc)) exhibit severe diastolic and mild systolic dysfunction. We tested the hypothesis that contractile dysfunction in myocardium expressing low levels of cTnT(trunc) (i.e., <5%) is due to slowed cross-bridge kinetics and reduced thin filament activation as a consequence of reduced cross-bridge binding. We measured the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development [pCa for half-maximal tension generation (pCa(50))] and the rate constant of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in cTnT(trunc) and wild-type (WT) skinned myocardium both in the absence and in the presence of a strong-binding, non-force-generating derivative of myosin subfragment-1 (NEM-S1). Compared with WT mice, cTnT(trunc) mice exhibited greater pCa(50), reduced steepness of the force-pCa relationship [Hill coefficient (n(H))], and faster k(tr) at submaximal Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)]), i.e., reduced activation dependence of k(tr). Treatment with NEM-S1 elicited similar increases in pCa(50) and similar reductions in n(H) in WT and cTnT(trunc) myocardium but elicited greater increases in k(tr) at submaximal activation in cTnT(trunc) myocardium. Contrary to our initial hypothesis, cTnT(trunc) appears to enhance thin filament activation in myocardium, which is manifested as significant increases in Ca(2+)-activated force and the rate of cross-bridge attachment at submaximal [Ca(2+)]. Although these mechanisms would not be expected to depress systolic function per se in cTnT(trunc) hearts, they would account for slowed rates of myocardial relaxation during early diastole.  相似文献   

6.
To study the effect of troponin (Tn) T mutations that cause familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) on cardiac muscle contraction, wild-type, and the following recombinant human cardiac TnT mutants were cloned and expressed: I79N, R92Q, F110I, E163K, R278C, and intron 16(G(1) --> A) (In16). These TnT FHC mutants were reconstituted into skinned cardiac muscle preparations and characterized for their effect on maximal steady state force activation, inhibition, and the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development. Troponin complexes containing these mutants were tested for their ability to regulate actin-tropomyosin(Tm)-activated myosin-ATPase activity. TnT(R278C) and TnT(F110I) reconstituted preparations demonstrated dramatically increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development, while those with TnT(R92Q) and TnT(I79N) showed a moderate increase. The deletion mutant, TnT(In16), significantly decreased both the activation and the inhibition of force, and substantially decreased the activation and the inhibition of actin-Tm-activated myosin-ATPase activity. ATPase activation was also impaired by TnT(F110I), while its inhibition was reduced by TnT(R278C). The TnT(E163K) mutation had the smallest effect on the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force; however, it produced an elevated activation of the ATPase activity in reconstituted thin filaments. These observed changes in the Ca(2+) regulation of force development caused by these mutations would likely cause altered contractility and contribute to the development of FHC.  相似文献   

7.
Six missense mutations in human cardiac troponin I (cTnI) were recently found to cause restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM). We have bacterially expressed and purified these human cTnI mutants and examined their functional and structural consequences. Inserting the human cTnI into skinned cardiac muscle fibers showed that these mutations had much greater Ca2+-sensitizing effects on force generation than the cTnI mutations in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The mutation K178E in the second actin-tropomyosin (Tm) binding region showed a particularly potent Ca2+-sensitizing effect among the six RCM-causing mutations. Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed that this mutation does not extensively affect the structure of the whole cTnI molecule, but induces an unexpectedly subtle change in the structure of a region around the mutated residue. The results indicate that the K178E mutation has a localized effect on a structure that is critical to the regulatory function of the second actin-Tm binding region of cTnI. The present study also suggests that both HCM and RCM involving cTnI mutations share a common feature of increased Ca2+ sensitivity of cardiac myofilament, but more severe change in Ca2+ sensitivity is associated with the clinical phenotype of RCM.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of this study is to investigate the molecular events associated with the deleterious effects of acidosis on the contractile properties of cardiac muscle as in the ischemia of heart failure. We have conducted a study of the effects of increasing acidity on the Ca(2+) induced conformational changes of pyrene labelled cardiac troponin C (PIA-cTnC) in isolation and in complex with porcine cardiac or chicken pectoral skeletal muscle TnI and/or TnT. The pyrene label has been shown to serve as a useful fluorescence reporter group for conformational and interaction events of the N-terminal regulatory domain of TnC with only minimal fluorescence changes associated with C-terminal domain. Results obtained show that the significant decreases at pH 6.0 of site II Ca(2+) affinity of PIA-cTnC when complexed as a binary complex with either cTnI or cTnT are significantly reduced when cTnI is replaced with sTnI or cTnT with sTnT. However, this effect is appreciably diminished when the cTnI and cTnT in the ternary complex are replaced by sTnI and sTnT. The smaller effects in the ternary complex of replacing both cTnI and cTnT by their skeletal counterparts on depressing the Ca(2+) affinity from pH 7.0 to 6.0 arise from TnI replacement. Thus, changes in TnC conformation resulting from isoform-specific interactions with TnI and TnT could be an integral part of the effect of pH on myofilament Ca(2+)sensitivity.  相似文献   

9.
We have compared the in vitro regulatory properties of recombinant human cardiac troponin reconstituted using wild type troponin T with troponin containing the DeltaLys-210 troponin T mutant that causes dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and the R92Q troponin T known to cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Troponin containing DeltaLys-210 troponin T inhibited actin-tropomyosin-activated myosin subfragment-1 ATPase activity to the same extent as wild type at pCa8.5 (>80%) but produced substantially less enhancement of ATPase at pCa4.5. The Ca(2+) sensitivity of ATPase activation was increased (DeltapCa(50) = +0.2 pCa units) and cooperativity of Ca(2+) activation was virtually abolished. Equimolar mixtures of wild type and DeltaLys-210 troponin T gave a lower Ca(2+) sensitivity than with wild type, while maintaining the diminished ATPase activation at pCa4.5 observed with 100% mutant. In contrast, R92Q troponin gave reduced inhibition at pCa8.5 but greater activation than wild type at pCa4.5; Ca(2+) sensitivity was increased but there was no change in cooperativity. In vitro motility assay of reconstituted thin filaments confirmed the ATPase results and moreover indicated that the predominant effect of the DeltaLys-210 mutation was a reduced sliding speed. The functional consequences of this DCM mutation are qualitatively different from the R92Q or any other studied HCM troponin T mutation, suggesting that DCM and HCM may be triggered by distinct primary stimuli.  相似文献   

10.
The major goal of this study was to elucidate how troponin T (TnT) dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) mutations in fetal TnT and fetal troponin affect the functional properties of the fetal heart that lead to infantile cardiomyopathy. The DCM mutations R141W and DeltaK210 were created in the TnT1 isoform, the primary isoform of cardiac TnT in the embryonic heart. In addition to a different TnT isoform, a different troponin I (TnI) isoform, slow skeletal TnI (ssTnI), is the dominant isoform in the embryonic heart. In skinned fiber studies, TnT1-wild-type (WT)-treated fibers reconstituted with cardiac TnI.troponin C (TnC) or ssTnI.TnC significantly increased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development when compared with TnT3-WT-treated fibers at both pH 7.0 and pH 6.5. Porcine cardiac fibers treated with TnT1 that contained the DCM mutations (R141W and DeltaK210), when reconstituted with either cardiac TnI.TnC or ssTnI.TnC, significantly decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development compared with TnT1-WT at both pH values. The R141W mutation, which showed no significant change in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development in the TnT3 isoform, caused a significant decrease in the TnT1 isoform. The DeltaK210 mutation caused a greater decrease in Ca(2+) sensitivity and maximal isometric force development compared with the R141W mutation in both the fetal and adult TnT isoforms. When complexed with cardiac TnI.TnC or ssTnI.TnC, both TnT1 DCM mutations strongly decreased maximal actomyosin ATPase activity as compared with TnT1-WT. Our results suggest that a decrease in maximal actomyosin ATPase activity in conjunction with decreased Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development may cause a severe DCM phenotype in infants with the mutations.  相似文献   

11.
This spectroscopic study examined the steady-state and kinetic parameters governing the cross-bridge effect on the increased Ca(2+) affinity of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-cardiac troponin C (HCM-cTnC) mutants. Previously, we found that incorporation of the A8V and D145E HCM-cTnC mutants, but not E134D into thin filaments (TFs), increased the apparent Ca(2+) affinity relative to TFs containing the WT protein. Here, we show that the addition of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) to TFs reconstituted with these mutants in the absence of MgATP(2-), the condition conducive to rigor cross-bridge formation, further increased the apparent Ca(2+) affinity. Stopped-flow fluorescence techniques were used to determine the kinetics of Ca(2+) dissociation (k(off)) from the cTnC mutants in the presence of TFs and S1. At a high level of complexity (i.e. TF + S1), an increase in the Ca(2+) affinity and decrease in k(off) was achieved for the A8V and D145E mutants when compared with WT. Therefore, it appears that the cTnC Ca(2+) off-rate is most likely to be affected rather than the Ca(2+) on rate. At all levels of TF complexity, the results obtained with the E134D mutant reproduced those seen with the WT protein. We conclude that strong cross-bridges potentiate the Ca(2+)-sensitizing effect of HCM-cTnC mutants on the myofilament. Finally, the slower k(off) from the A8V and D145E mutants can be directly correlated with the diastolic dysfunction seen in these patients.  相似文献   

12.
The functional consequences of the R92Q mutation in cardiac troponin T (cTnT), linked to familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in humans, are not well understood. We have studied steady- and pre-steady-state mechanical activity of detergent-skinned fiber bundles from a transgenic (TG) mouse model in which 67% of the total cTnT in the heart was replaced by the R92Q mutant cTnT. TG fibers were more sensitive to Ca(2+) than nontransgenic (NTG) fibers [negative logarithm of half maximally activating molar Ca(2+) (pCa(50)) = 5.84 +/- 0.01 and 6.12 +/- 0.01 for NTG and TG fibers, respectively]. The shift in pCa(50) caused by increasing the sarcomere length from 1.9 to 2.3 microm was significantly higher for TG than for NTG fibers (DeltapCa(50) = 0.13 +/- 0.01 and 0.29 +/- 0.02 for NTG and TG fibers, respectively). The relationships between rate of ATP consumption and steady-state isometric tension were linear, and the slopes were the same in NTG and TG fibers. Rate of tension redevelopment was more sensitive to Ca(2+) in TG than in NTG fibers (pCa(50) = 5.71 +/- 0.02 and 6.07 +/- 0.02 for NTG and TG fibers, respectively). We concluded that overall cross-bridge cycling kinetics are not altered by the R92Q mutation but that altered troponin-tropomyosin interactions could be responsible for the increase in myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity in TG myofilaments.  相似文献   

13.
Cardiac Troponin T (cTnT) is one prominent substrate through which protein kinase C (PKC) exerts its effect on cardiomyocyte function. To determine the specific functional effects of the cTnT PKC-dependent phosphorylation sites (Thr197, Ser201, Thr206, and Thr287) we first mutated these residues to glutamate (E) or alanine (A). cTnT was selectively mutated to generate single, double, triple, and quadruple mutants. Bacterially expressed mutants were evaluated in detergent-treated mouse left ventricular papillary muscle fiber bundles where the endogenous troponin was replaced with a recombinant troponin complex containing either cTnT phosphorylated by PKC-alpha or a mutant cTnT. We simultaneously determined isometric tension development and actomyosin Mg-ATPase activity of the exchanged fiber bundles as a function of Ca2+ concentration. Our systematic analysis of the functional role of the multiple PKC phosphorylation sites on cTnT identified a localized region that controls maximum tension, ATPase activity, and Ca2+ sensitivity of the myofilaments. An important and novel finding of our study was that Thr206 is a functionally critical cTnT PKC phosphorylation residue. Its exclusive phosphorylation by PKC-alpha or replacement by Glu (mimicking phosphorylation) significantly decreased maximum tension, actomyosin Mg-ATPase activity, myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity, and cooperativity. On the other hand the charge modification of the other three residues together (T197/S201/T287-E) had no functional effect. Fibers bundles containing phosphorylated cTnT-wt (but not the T197/S201/T206/T287-E) exhibited a significant decrease of tension cost as compared with cTnT-wt.  相似文献   

14.
Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy has been associated with several mutations in the gene encoding human cardiac troponin I (HCTnI). A missense mutation in the inhibitory region of TnI replaces an arginine residue at position 145 with a glycine and cosegregates with the disease. Results from several assays indicate that the inhibitory function of HCTnI(R145G) is significantly reduced. When HCTnI(R145G) was incorporated into whole troponin, Tn(R145G) (HCTnT small middle dotHCTnI(R145G) small middle dotHCTnC), only partial inhibition of the actin-tropomyosin-myosin ATPase activity was observed in the absence of Ca(2+) compared with wild type Tn (HCTnT small middle dotHCTnI small middle dotHCTnC). Maximal activation of actin-tropomyosin-myosin ATPase in the presence of Ca(2+) was also decreased in Tn(R145G) when compared with Tn. Using skinned cardiac muscle fibers, we determined that in comparison with the wild type complex 1) the complex containing HCTnI(R145G) only inhibited 84% of Ca(2+)-unregulated force, 2) the recovery of Ca(2+)-activated force was decreased, and 3) there was a significant increase in the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development. Computer modeling of troponin C and I variables predicts that the primary defect in TnI caused by these mutations would lead to diastolic dysfunction. These results suggest that severe diastolic dysfunction and somewhat decreased contractility would be prominent clinical features and that hypertrophy could arise as a compensatory mechanism.  相似文献   

15.
Nuclear actin - which is immunologically distinct from cytoplasmic actin - has been documented in a number of differentiated cell types, and cardiac isoforms of troponin I (cTnI) and troponin T (cTnT) have been detected in association with nuclei of adult human cardiac myocytes. It is not known whether these and related proteins are present in undifferentiated stem cells, or when they appear in cardiomyogenic cells following differentiation. We first tested the hypothesis that nuclear actin and cardiac isoforms of troponin C (cTnC) and tropomyosin (cTm) are present along with cTnI and cTnT in nuclei of isolated, neonatal rat cardiomyocytes in culture. We also tested the hypothesis that of these five proteins, only actin is present in nuclei of multipotent, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) from adult rats in culture, but that cTnC, cTnI, cTnT and cTm appear early and uniquely following cardiomyogenic differentiation. Here we show that nuclear actin is present within nuclei of both ventricular cardiomyocytes and undifferentiated, multipotent BM-MSCs. We furthermore show that cTnC, cTnI, cTnT and cTm are not only present in myofilaments of ventricular cardiomyocytes in culture but are also within their nuclei; significantly, these four proteins appear between days 3 and 5 in both myofilaments and nuclei of BM-MSCs treated to differentiate into cardiomyogenic cells. These observations indicate that cardiac troponin and tropomyosin could have important cellular function(s) beyond Ca(2+)-regulation of contraction. While the roles of nuclear-associated actin, troponin subunits and tropomyosin in cardiomyocytes are not known, we anticipate that the BM-MSC culture system described here will be useful for elucidating their function(s), which likely involve cardiac-specific, Ca(2+)-dependent signaling in the nucleus.  相似文献   

16.
The length and amino acid sequence of the amino-terminal region of troponin T (TnT) is regulated by alternative mRNA processing in both mammals and birds. To study the function of this region, three forms of bovine cardiac TnT were compared: isoforms TnT1 and TnT2, which differ by the presence or absence of residues 15-19 and TnT 39-284. TnT 39-284 was prepared by chemical cleavage of TnT1 at Cys-39. All three forms of TnT successfully reconstituted with troponin I and troponin C, resulting in troponins designated Tn1, Tn2, and TnCN. Three properties of the reconstituted troponins were compared. 1) Tn1 and TnCN had indistinguishable effects on tropomyosin polymerization. Addition of either 8 microM Tn1 or 8 microM TnCN increased the viscosity (eta rel) of 5 microM tropomyosin from 1.0 to 1.63 at 10 degrees C. 2) All of the three troponins conferred Ca2+ dependence to the MgATPase rate of myosin S-1-actin-tropomyosin. In the presence of saturating concentrations of Tn2, Tn1, or TnCN, 50% MgATPase activation occurred at pCa 6.0, 5.9, or 5.75, respectively. 3) The affinity of the Ca2+-specific binding site of reconstituted Tn1 was 50% stronger than the affinity of the same site on TnCN. These results suggest that the amino-terminal region of cardiac TnT is not a completely Ca2+-insensitive domain, but rather modulates the interaction of Ca2+ with troponin and with the thin filament. Furthermore, the effects of TnT on tropomyosin-tropomyosin binding are predominantly due to portions of TnT carboxyl-terminal to residue 38.  相似文献   

17.
The three subunits of the human cardiac troponin complex (hcTnC, hcTnI, hcTnT) were overexpressed in E. coli, purified and reconstituted to form the hcTn complex. This complex was then incorporated into subcellular bundles of mouse cardiac myofibrils whereby the native mcTn complex was replaced. On thus exchanged myofibrils, isometric force kinetics following sudden changes in free Ca(2+) concentration were measured using atomic force cantilevers. Following the exchange, the myofibrillar force remained fully Ca(2+) regulated, i.e. myofibrils were completely relaxed at pCa 7.5 and developed the same maximum Ca(2+)-activated isometric force upon increasing the pCa to 4.5 as unexchanged myofibrils. The replacement of endogenous mcTn by wild-type hcTn neither altered the kinetics of Ca(2+)-induced force development of the mouse myofibrils nor the kinetics of force relaxation induced by the sudden, complete removal of Ca(2+). Preparations of functional Tn reconstituted myofibrils provide a promising model to study the role of Tn in kinetic mechanisms of cardiac myofibrillar contraction and relaxation.  相似文献   

18.
Previously, we utilized (15)N transverse relaxation rates to demonstrate significant mobility in the linker region and conformational exchange in the regulatory domain of Ca(2+)-saturated cardiac troponin C bound to the isolated N-domain of cardiac troponin I (Gaponenko, V., Abusamhadneh, E., Abbott, M. B., Finley, N., Gasmi-Seabrook, G., Solaro, R.J., Rance, M., and Rosevear, P.R. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 16681-16684). Here we show a large decrease in cardiac troponin C linker flexibility, corresponding to residues 85-93, when bound to intact cardiac troponin I. The addition of 2 m urea to the intact cardiac troponin I-troponin C complex significantly increased linker flexibility. Conformational changes in the regulatory domain of cardiac troponin C were monitored in complexes with troponin I-(1-211), troponin I-(33-211), troponin I-(1-80) and bisphosphorylated troponin I-(1-80). The cardiac specific N terminus, residues 1-32, and the C-domain, residues 81-211, of troponin I are both capable of inducing conformational changes in the troponin C regulatory domain. Phosphorylation of the cardiac specific N terminus reversed its effects on the regulatory domain. These studies provide the first evidence that the cardiac specific N terminus can modulate the function of troponin C by altering the conformational equilibrium of the regulatory domain.  相似文献   

19.
How different mutations in cardiac troponin T (cTnT) lead to distinct secondary downstream cellular remodeling in familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) remains elusive. To explore the molecular basis for the distinct impact of different mutations in cTnT on cardiac myocytes, we studied mechanical activity of detergent-skinned muscle fiber bundles from different lines of transgenic (TG) mouse hearts that express wild-type cTnT (WTTG), R92W cTnT, R92L cTnT, and Delta-160 cTnT (deletion of amino acid 160). The amount of mutant cTnT is approximately 50% of the total myocellular cTnT in both R92W and R92L TG mouse hearts and approximately 35% in Delta-160 TG mouse hearts. Myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity was enhanced in all mutant cTnT TG cardiac muscle fibers. Compared with the WTTG fibers, Ca2+ sensitivity increased significantly at short sarcomere length (SL) of 1.9 microm (P < 0.001) in R92W TG fibers by 2.2-fold, in R92L by 2.0-fold, and in Delta-160 by 1.3-fold. At long SL of 2.3 microm, Ca2+ sensitivity increased significantly (P < 0.01) in a similar manner (R92W, 2.5-fold; R92L, 1.9-fold; Delta-160, 1.3-fold). Ca2+-activated maximal tension remained unaltered in all TG muscle fibers. However, tension-dependent ATP consumption increased significantly in Delta-160 TG muscle fibers at both short SL (23%, P < 0.005) and long SL (37%, P < 0.0001), suggesting a mutation-induced change in cross-bridge detachment rate constant. Chronic stresses on relative cellular ATP level in cardiac myocytes may cause a strain on energy-dependent Ca2+ homeostatic mechanisms. This may result in pathological remodeling that we observed in Delta-160 TG cardiac myocytes where the ratio of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2/phospholamban decreased significantly. Our results suggest that different types of stresses imposed on cardiac myocytes would trigger distinct cellular signaling, which leads to remodeling that may be unique to some mutants.  相似文献   

20.
The inhibitory region of troponin I (TnI) plays a central regulatory role in the contraction and relaxation cycle of skeletal and cardiac muscle through its Ca(2+)-dependent interaction with actin. Detailed structural information on the interface between TnC and this region of TnI has been long in dispute. We have used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to investigate the global conformation of the inhibitory region of a full-length TnI mutant from cardiac muscle (cTnI) in the unbound state and in reconstituted complexes with the other cardiac troponin subunits. The mutant contained a single tryptophan residue at the position 129 which was used as an energy transfer donor, and a single cysteine residue at the position 152 labeled with IAEDANS as energy acceptor. The sequence between Trp129 and Cys152 in cTnI brackets the inhibitory region (residues 130-149), and the distance between the two sites was found to be 19.4 A in free cTnI. This distance was insensitive to reconstitution of cTnI with cardiac troponin T (cTnT), cTnC, or cTnC and cTnT in the absence of bound regulatory Ca(2+) in cTnC. An increase of 9 A in the Trp129-Cys152 separation was observed upon saturation of the Ca(2+) regulatory site of cTnC in the complexes. This large increase suggests an extended conformation of the inhibitory region in the interface between cTnC and cTnI in holo cardiac troponin. This extended conformation is different from a recent model of the Ca(2+)-saturated skeletal TnI-TnC complex in which the inhibitory region is modeled as a beta-turn. The observed Ca(2+)-induced conformational change may be a switch mechanism by which movement of the regulatory region of cTnI to the exposed hydrophobic patch of the open regulatory N-domain of cTnC pulls the inhibitory region away from actin upon Ca(2+) activation in cardiac muscle.  相似文献   

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