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1.
Strongly bound, force-generating myosin cross-bridges play an important role as allosteric activators of cardiac thin filaments. Sodium vanadate (Vi) is a phosphate analog that inhibits force by preventing cross-bridge transition into force-producing states. This study characterizes the mechanical state of cross-bridges with bound Vi as a tool to examine the contribution of cross-bridges to cardiac contractile activation. The K(i) of force inhibition by Vi was approximately 40 microM. Sinusoidal stiffness was inhibited with Vi, although to a lesser extent than force. We used chord stiffness measurements to monitor Vi-induced changes in cross-bridge attachment/detachment kinetics at saturating [Ca(2+)]. Vi decreased chord stiffness at the fastest rates of stretch, whereas at slow rates chord stiffness actually increased. This suggests a shift in cross-bridge population toward low force states with very slow attachment/detachment kinetics. Low angle x-ray diffraction measurements indicate that with Vi cross-bridge mass shifted away from thin filaments, implying decreased cross-bridge/thin filament interaction. The combined x-ray and mechanical data suggest at least two cross-bridge populations with Vi; one characteristic of normal cycling cross-bridges, and a population of weak-binding cross-bridges with bound Vi and slow attachment/detachment kinetics. The Ca(2+) sensitivity of force (pCa(50)) and force redevelopment kinetics (k(TR)) were measured to study the effects of Vi on contractile activation. When maximal force was inhibited by 40% with Vi pCa(50) decreased, but greater force inhibition at higher [Vi] did not further alter pCa(50). In contrast, the Ca(2+) sensitivity of k(TR) was unaffected by Vi. Interestingly, when force was inhibited by Vi k(TR) increased at submaximal levels of Ca(2+)-activated force. Additionally, k(TR) is faster at saturating Ca(2+) at [Vi] that inhibit force by > approximately 70%. The effects of Vi on k(TR) imply that k(TR) is determined not only by the intrinsic properties of the cross-bridge cycle, but also by cross-bridge contribution to thin filament activation.  相似文献   

2.
We examined the influence of cross-bridge cycling kinetics on the length dependence of steady-state force and the rate of force redevelopment (k(tr)) during Ca(2+)-activation at sarcomere lengths (SL) of 2.0 and 2.3 microm in skinned rat cardiac trabeculae. Cross-bridge kinetics were altered by either replacing ATP with 2-deoxy-ATP (dATP) or by reducing [ATP]. At each SL dATP increased maximal force (F(max)) and Ca(2+)-sensitivity of force (pCa(50)) and reduced the cooperativity (n(H)) of force-pCa relations, whereas reducing [ATP] to 0.5 mM (low ATP) increased pCa(50) and n(H) without changing F(max). The difference in pCa(50) between SL 2.0 and 2.3 microm (Delta pCa(50)) was comparable between ATP and dATP, but reduced with low ATP. Maximal k(tr) was elevated by dATP and reduced by low ATP. Ca(2+)-sensitivity of k(tr) increased with both dATP and low ATP and was unaffected by altered SL under all conditions. Significantly, at equivalent levels of submaximal force k(tr) was faster at short SL or increased lattice spacing. These data demonstrate that the SL dependence of force depends on cross-bridge kinetics and that the increase of force upon SL extension occurs without increasing the rate of transitions between nonforce and force-generating cross-bridge states, suggesting SL or lattice spacing may modulate preforce cross-bridge transitions.  相似文献   

3.
In striated muscle thin filament activation is initiated by Ca(2+) binding to troponin C and augmented by strong myosin binding to actin (cross-bridge formation). Several lines of evidence have led us to hypothesize that thin filament properties may limit the level and rate of force development in cardiac muscle at all levels of Ca(2+) activation. As a test of this hypothesis we varied the cross-bridge contribution to thin filament activation by substituting 2 deoxy-ATP (dATP; a strong cross-bridge augmenter) for ATP as the contractile substrate and compared steady-state force and stiffness, and the rate of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in demembranated rat cardiac trabeculae as [Ca(2+)] was varied. We also tested whether thin filament dynamics limits force development kinetics during maximal Ca(2+) activation by comparing the rate of force development (k(Ca)) after a step increase in [Ca(2+)] with photorelease of Ca(2+) from NP-EGTA to maximal k(tr), where Ca(2+) binding to thin filaments should be in (near) equilibrium during force redevelopment. dATP enhanced steady-state force and stiffness at all levels of Ca(2+) activation. At similar submaximal levels of steady-state force there was no increase in k(tr) with dATP, but k(tr) was enhanced at higher Ca(2+) concentrations, resulting in an extension (not elevation) of the k(tr)-force relationship. Interestingly, we found that maximal k(tr) was faster than k(Ca), and that dATP increased both by a similar amount. Our data suggest the dynamics of Ca(2+)-mediated thin filament activation limits the rate that force develops in rat cardiac muscle, even at saturating levels of Ca(2+).  相似文献   

4.
Fiber isometric tension redevelopment rate (kTR) was measured during submaximal and maximal activations in glycerinated fibers from rabbit psoas muscle. In fibers either containing endogenous skeletal troponin C (sTnC) or reconstituted with either purified cardiac troponin C (cTnC) or sTnC, graded activation was achieved by varying [Ca2+]. Some fibers were first partially, then fully, reconstituted with a modified form of cTnC (aTnC) that enables active force generation and shortening in the absence of Ca2+. kTR was derived from the half-time of tension redevelopment. In control fibers with endogenous sTnC, kTR increased nonlinearly with [Ca2+], and maximal kTR was 15.3 +/- 3.6 s-1 (mean +/- SD; n = 26 determinations on 25 fibers) at pCa 4.0. During submaximal activations by Ca2+, kTR in cTnC reconstituted fibers was approximately threefold faster than control, despite the lower (60%) maximum Ca(2+)-activated force after reconstitution. To obtain submaximal force with aTnC, eight fibers were treated to fully extract endogenous sTnC, then reconstituted with a mixture of a TnC and cTnC (aTnC:cTnC molar ratio 1:8.5). A second extraction selectively removed cTnC. In such fibers containing aTnC only, neither force nor kTR was affected by changes in [Ca2+]. Force was 22 +/- 7% of maximum control (mean +/- SD; n = 15) at pCa 9.2 vs. 24 +/- 8% (mean +/- SD; n = 8) at pCa 4.0, whereas kTR was 98 +/- 14% of maximum control (mean +/- SD; n = 15) at pCa 9.2 vs. 96 +/- 15% (mean +/- SD; n = 8) at pCa 4.0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The kinetics of Ca(2+)-induced contractions of chemically skinned guinea pig trabeculae was studied using laser photolysis of NP-EGTA. The amount of free Ca(2+) released was altered by varying the output from a frequency-doubled ruby laser focused on the trabeculae, while maintaining constant total [NP-EGTA] and [Ca(2+)]. The time courses of the rise in stiffness and tension were biexponential at 23 degrees C, pH 7.1, and 200 mM ionic strength. At full activation (pCa < 5.0), the rates of the rapid phase of the stiffness and tension rise were 56 +/- 7 s(-1) (n = 7) and 48 +/- 6 s(-1) (n = 11) while the amplitudes were 21 +/- 2 and 23 +/- 3%, respectively. These rates had similar dependencies on final [Ca(2+)] achieved by photolysis: 43 and 50 s(-1) per pCa unit, respectively, over a range of [Ca(2+)] producing from 15% to 90% of maximal isometric tension. At all [Ca(2+)], the rise in stiffness initially was faster than that of tension. The maximal rates for the slower components of the rise in stiffness and tension were 4.1 +/- 0.8 and 6.2 +/- 1.0 s(-1). The rate of this slower phase exhibited significantly less Ca(2+) sensitivity, 1 and 4 s(-1) per pCa unit for stiffness and tension, respectively. These data, along with previous studies indicating that the force-generating step in the cross-bridge cycle of cardiac muscle is marginally sensitive to [Ca(2+)], suggest a mechanism of regulation in which Ca(2+) controls the attachment step in the cross-bridge cycle via a rapid equilibrium with the thin filament activation state. Myosin kinetics sets the time course for the rise in stiffness and force generation with the biexponential nature of the mechanical responses to steps in [Ca(2+)] arising from a shift to slower cross-bridge kinetics as the number of strongly bound cross-bridges increases.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Changes in skeletal troponin C (sTnC) structure during thin filament activation by Ca2+ and strongly bound cross-bridge states were monitored by measuring the linear dichroism of the 5' isomer of iodoacetamidotetramethylrhodamine (5'IATR), attached to Cys98 (sTnC-5'ATR), in sTnC-5'ATR reconstituted single skinned fibers from rabbit psoas muscle. To isolate the effects of Ca2+ and cross-bridge binding on sTnC structure, maximum Ca2+-activated force was inhibited with 0.5 mM AlF4- or with 30 mM 2,3 butanedione-monoxime (BDM) during measurements of the Ca2+ dependence of force and dichroism. Dichroism was 0.08 +/- 0.01 (+/- SEM, n = 9) in relaxing solution (pCa 9.2) and decreased to 0.004 +/- 0.002 (+/- SEM, n = 9) at pCa 4.0. Force and dichroism had similar Ca2+ sensitivities. Force inhibition with BDM caused no change in the amplitude and Ca2+ sensitivity of dichroism. Similarly, inhibition of force at pCa 4.0 with 0.5 mM AlF4- decreased force to 0.04 +/- 0.01 of maximum (+/- SEM, n = 3), and dichroism was 0.04 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 3) of the value at pCa 9.2 and unchanged relative to the corresponding normalized value at pCa 4.0 (0.11 +/- 0.05, +/- SEM; n = 3). Inhibition of force with AlF4- also had no effect when sTnC structure was monitored by labeling with either 5-dimethylamino-1-napthalenylsulfonylaziridine (DANZ) or 4-(N-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (NBD). Increasing sarcomere length from 2.5 to 3.6 microm caused force (pCa 4.0) to decrease, but had no effect on dichroism. In contrast, rigor cross-bridge attachment caused dichroism at pCa 9.2 to decrease to 0.56 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 5) of the value at pCa 9. 2, and force was 0.51 +/- 0.04 (+/- SEM, n = 6) of pCa 4.0 control. At pCa 4.0 in rigor, dichroism decreased further to 0.19 +/- 0.03 (+/- SEM, n = 6), slightly above the pCa 4.0 control level; force was 0.66 +/- 0.04 of pCa 4.0 control. These results indicate that cross-bridge binding in the rigor state alters sTnC structure, whereas cycling cross-bridges have little influence at either submaximum or maximum activating [Ca2+].  相似文献   

8.
Thin filament regulation of contraction is thought to involve the binding of two activating ligands: Ca2+ and strongly bound cross-bridges. The specific cross-bridge states required to promote thin filament activation have not been identified. This study examines the relationship between cross-bridge cycling and thin filament activation by comparing the results of kinetic experiments using the Ca2+ sensitizers caffeine and bepridil. In single skinned rat soleus fibers, 30 mM caffeine produced a leftward shift in the tension-pCa relation from 6.03 +/- 0.03 to 6.51 +/- 0.03 pCa units and lowered the maximum tension to 0.60 +/- 0.01 of the control tension. In addition, the rate of tension redevelopment (ktr) was decreased from 3.51 +/- 0.12 s-1 to 2.70 +/- 0.19 s-1, and Vmax decreased from 1.24 +/- 0.07 to 0.64 +/- 0.02 M.L./s. Bepridil produced a similar shift in the tension-pCa curves but had no effect on the kinetics. Thus bepridil increases the Ca2+ sensitivity through direct effects on TnC, whereas caffeine has significant effects on the cross-bridge interaction. Interestingly, caffeine also produced a significant increase in stiffness under relaxing conditions (pCa 9.0), indicating that caffeine induces some strongly bound cross-bridges, even in the absence of Ca2+. The results are interpreted in terms of a model integrating cross-bridge cycling with a three-state thin-filament activation model. Significantly, strongly bound, non-tension-producing cross-bridges were essential to modeling of complete activation of the thin filament.  相似文献   

9.
Muscle fatigue reflects alterations of both activation and cross-bridge function, which will have markedly different affects on steady-state vs. dynamic performance. Such differences offer insight into the specific origins of fatigue, its mechanical manifestation, and its consequences for animal movement. These were inferred using dynamic contractions (twitches and cyclic work as might occur during locomotion) and steady-state performance with maximal, sustained activation (tetani, stiffness, and isokinetic force) during fatigue and then recovery of frog (Rana pipiens) anterior tibialis muscle. Stiffness remained unaltered during early fatigue of force and then declined only 25% as force dropped 50%, suggesting a decline with fatigue in first the force-generating ability and then the number of cross bridges. The relationship between stiffness and force was different during fatigue and recovery; thus the number of cross bridges and force per cross bridge are not intimately linked. Twitch duration increased with fatigue and then recovered, with trajectories that were remarkably similar to and linear with changes in tetanic force, perhaps belying a common mechanism. Twitch force increased and then returned to resting levels during fatigue, reflecting a slowing of activation kinetics and a decline in cross-bridge number and force. Net cyclic work fatigued to the degree of becoming negative when tetanic force had declined only 15%. Steady-state isokinetic force (i.e., shortening work) declined by 75%, while cyclic shortening work declined only 30%. Slowed activation kinetics were again responsible, augmenting cyclic shortening work but greatly augmenting lengthening work (reducing net work). Steady-state measures can thus seriously mislead regarding muscle performance in an animal during fatigue.  相似文献   

10.
To examine if the Ca2(+)-binding kinetics of troponin C (TnC) can influence the rate of cross-bridge force production, we studied the effects of calmidazolium (CDZ) on steady-state force and the rate of force redevelopment (ktr) in skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers. CDZ increased the Ca2(+)-sensitivity of steady-state force and ktr at submaximal levels of activation, but increased ktr to a greater extent than can be explained by increased force alone. This occurred in the absence of any significant effects of CDZ on solution ATPase or in vitro motility of fluorescently labeled F-actin, suggesting that CDZ did not directly influence cross-bridge cycling. CDZ was strongly bound to TnC in aqueous solutions, and its effects on force production could be reversed by extraction of CDZ-exposed native TnC and replacement with purified (unexposed) rabbit skeletal TnC. These experiments suggest that the method of CDZ action in fibers is to bind to TnC and increase its Ca2(+)-binding affinity, which results in an increased rate of force production at submaximal [Ca2+]. The results also demonstrate that the Ca2(+)-binding kinetics of TnC influence the kinetics of ktr.  相似文献   

11.
Regulation of contraction in skeletal muscle is a highly cooperative process involving Ca(2+) binding to troponin C (TnC) and strong binding of myosin cross-bridges to actin. To further investigate the role(s) of cooperation in activating the kinetics of cross-bridge cycling, we measured the Ca(2+) dependence of the rate constant of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in skinned single fibers in which cross-bridge and Ca(2+) binding were also perturbed. Ca(2+) sensitivity of tension, the steepness of the force-pCa relationship, and Ca(2+) dependence of k(tr) were measured in skinned fibers that were (1) treated with NEM-S1, a strong-binding, non-force-generating derivative of myosin subfragment 1, to promote cooperative strong binding of endogenous cross-bridges to actin; (2) subjected to partial extraction of TnC to disrupt the spread of activation along the thin filament; or (3) both, partial extraction of TnC and treatment with NEM-S1. The steepness of the force-pCa relationship was consistently reduced by treatment with NEM-S1, by partial extraction of TnC, or by a combination of TnC extraction and NEM-S1, indicating a decrease in the apparent cooperativity of activation. Partial extraction of TnC or NEM-S1 treatment accelerated the rate of force redevelopment at each submaximal force, but had no effect on kinetics of force development in maximally activated preparations. At low levels of Ca(2+), 3 microM NEM-S1 increased k(tr) to maximal values, and higher concentrations of NEM-S1 (6 or 10 microM) increased k(tr) to greater than maximal values. NEM-S1 also accelerated k(tr) at intermediate levels of activation, but to values that were submaximal. However, the combination of partial TnC extraction and 6 microM NEM-S1 increased k(tr) to virtually identical supramaximal values at all levels of activation, thus, completely eliminating the activation dependence of k(tr). These results show that k(tr) is not maximal in control fibers, even at saturating [Ca(2+)], and suggest that activation dependence of k(tr) is due to the combined activating effects of Ca(2+) binding to TnC and cross-bridge binding to actin.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of dissociation of force-generating cross bridges on intracellular Ca(2+), pCa-force, and pCa-ATPase relationships were investigated in mouse skeletal muscle. Mechanical length perturbations were used to dissociate force-generating cross bridges in either intact or skinned fibers. In intact muscle, an impulse stretch or release, a continuous length vibration, a nonoverlap stretch, or an unloaded shortening during a twitch caused a transient increase in intracellular Ca(2+) compared with that in isometric controls and resulted in deactivation of the muscle. In skinned fibers, sinusoidal length vibrations shifted pCa-force and pCa-actomyosin ATPase rate relationships to higher Ca(2+) concentrations and caused actomyosin ATPase rate to decrease at submaximal Ca(2+) and increase at maximal Ca(2+) activation. These results suggest that dissociation of force-generating cross bridges during a twitch causes the off rate of Ca(2+) from troponin C to increase (a decrease in the Ca(2+) affinity of troponin C), thus decreasing the Ca(2+) sensitivity and resulting in the deactivation of the muscle. The results also suggest that the Fenn effect only exists at maximal but not submaximal force-activating Ca(2+) concentrations.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of varying concentrations of Pi and Ca2+ on isometric force and on the rate of force development in skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers has been investigated. Steady-state results show that the three parameters that define the force-pCa relation (Po, pK, and n) all vary linearly with log [Pi]. As [Pi] increases, Po and pK decrease while n increases. The kinetics of force generation in isometrically contracting fibers were studied by laser flash photolysis of caged phosphate. The observed rate of the resulting tension transient, kPi, is 23.5 +/- 1.7 s-1 at 10 degrees C, 0.7 mM Pi, and is independent of [Ca2+] over the range pCa 4.5-7.2. By contrast, kTR, the rate of tension redevelopment following a period of isotonic shortening, is sensitive to [Ca2+] and is slower than kPi (kTR = 13.6 +/- 0.2 s-1 at pCa 4.5, 0.7 mM Pi). The results show that [Ca2+] does not directly affect the Pi release or force-generating steps of the cross-bridge cycle and show that the observed rate of force development depends on how the measurement is made. The data can be interpreted in terms of a model in which strong cross-bridges activate the thin filament, this activation being modulated by Ca2+ binding to troponin.  相似文献   

14.
We examined the kinetic properties of rabbit skinned skeletal muscle fibers in which the endogenous myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) was partially replaced with a mutant RLC (D47A) containing a point mutation within the Ca2+/Mg2+ binding site that severely reduced its affinity for divalent cations. We found that when approximately 50% of the endogenous RLC was replaced by the mutant, maximum tension declined to approximately 60% of control and the rate constant of active tension redevelopment (ktr) after mechanical disruption of cross-bridges was reduced to approximately 70% of control. This reduction in ktr was not an indirect effect on kinetics due to a reduced number of strongly bound myosin heads, because when the strongly binding cross-bridge analog N-ethylmaleimide-modified myosin subfragment1 (NEM-S1) was added to the fibers, there was no effect upon maximum ktr. Fiber stiffness declined after D47A exchange in a manner indicative of a decrease in the number of strongly bound cross-bridges, suggesting that the force per cross-bridge was not significantly affected by the presence of D47A RLC. In contrast to the effects on ktr, the rate of tension relaxation in steadily activated fibers after flash photolysis of the Ca2+ chelator diazo-2 increased by nearly twofold after D47A exchange. We conclude that the incorporation of the nondivalent cation-binding mutant of myosin RLC decreases the proportion of cycling cross-bridges in a force-generating state by decreasing the rate of formation of force-generating bridges and increasing the rate of detachment. These results suggest that divalent cation binding to myosin RLC plays an important role in modulating the kinetics of cross-bridge attachment and detachment.  相似文献   

15.
In skinned myocardium, cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)-catalyzed phosphorylation of cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) and cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is associated with a reduction in the Ca(2+) responsiveness of myofilaments and an acceleration in the kinetics of cross-bridge cycling, although the respective contribution of these two proteins remains controversial. To further examine the relative roles that cTnI and cMyBP-C phosphorylation play in altering myocardial function, we determined the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force (pCa(50)) and the activation dependence of the rate of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in control and PKA-treated mouse myocardium (isolated in the presence of 2,3-butanedione monoxime) expressing: (a) phosphorylatable cTnI and cMyBP-C (wild type [WT]), (b) phosphorylatable cTnI on a cMyBP-C-null background (cMyBP-C(-/-)), (c) nonphosphorylatable cTnI with serines(23/24/43/45) and threonine(144) mutated to alanines (cTnI(Ala5)), and (d) nonphosphorylatable cTnI on a cMyBP-C-null background (cTnI(Ala5)/cMyBP-C(-/-)). Here, PKA treatment decreased pCa(50) in WT, cTnI(Ala5), and cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium by 0.13, 0.08, and 0.09 pCa units, respectively, but had no effect in cTnI(Ala5)/cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium. In WT and cTnI(Ala5) myocardium, PKA treatment also increased k(tr) at submaximal levels of activation; however, PKA treatment did not have an effect on k(tr) in cMyBP-C(-/-) or cTnI(Ala5)/cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium. In addition, reconstitution of cTnI(Ala5)/cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium with recombinant cMyBP-C restored the effects of PKA treatment on pCa(50) and k(tr) reported in cTnI(Ala5) myocardium. Collectively, these results indicate that the attenuation in myofilament force response to PKA occurs as a result of both cTnI and cMyBP-C phosphorylation, and that the reduction in pCa(50) mediated by cMyBP-C phosphorylation most likely arises from an accelerated cross-bridge cycling kinetics partly as a result of an increased rate constant of cross-bridge detachment.  相似文献   

16.
Force development in smooth muscle, as in skeletal muscle, is believed to reflect recruitment of force-generating myosin cross-bridges. However, little is known about the events underlying cross-bridge recruitment as the muscle cell approaches peak isometric force and then enters a period of tension maintenance. In the present studies on single smooth muscle cells isolated from the toad (Bufo marinus) stomach muscularis, active muscle stiffness, calculated from the force response to small sinusoidal length changes (0.5% cell length, 250 Hz), was utilized to estimate the relative number of attached cross-bridges. By comparing stiffness during initial force development to stiffness during force redevelopment immediately after a quick release imposed at peak force, we propose that the instantaneous active stiffness of the cell reflects both a linearly elastic cross-bridge element having 1.5 times the compliance of the cross-bridge in frog skeletal muscle and a series elastic component having an exponential length-force relationship. At the onset of force development, the ratio of stiffness to force was 2.5 times greater than at peak isometric force. These data suggest that, upon activation, cross-bridges attach in at least two states (i.e., low-force-producing and high-force-producing) and redistribute to a steady state distribution at peak isometric force. The possibility that the cross-bridge cycling rate was modulated with time was also investigated by analyzing the time course of tension recovery to small, rapid step length changes (0.5% cell length in 2.5 ms) imposed during initial force development, at peak force, and after 15 s of tension maintenance. The rate of tension recovery slowed continuously throughout force development following activation and slowed further as force was maintained. Our results suggest that the kinetics of force production in smooth muscle may involve a redistribution of cross-bridge populations between two attached states and that the average cycling rate of these cross-bridges becomes slower with time during contraction.  相似文献   

17.
Linear dichroism of 5' tetramethyl-rhodamine (5'ATR) was measured to monitor the effect of sarcomere length (SL) on troponin C (TnC) structure during Ca2+ activation in single glycerinated rabbit psoas fibers and skinned right ventricular trabeculae from rats. Endogenous TnC was extracted, and the preparations were reconstituted with TnC fluorescently labeled with 5'ATR. In skinned psoas fibers reconstituted with sTnC labeled at Cys 98 with 5'ATR, dichroism was maximal during relaxation (pCa 9.2) and was minimal at pCa 4.0. In skinned cardiac trabeculae reconstituted with a mono-cysteine mutant cTnC (cTnC(C84)), dichroism of the 5'ATR probe attached to Cys 84 increased during Ca2+ activation of force. Force and dichroism-[Ca2+] relations were fit with the Hill equation to determine the pCa50 and slope (n). Increasing SL increased the Ca2+ sensitivity of force in both skinned psoas fibers and trabeculae. However, in skinned psoas fibers, neither SL changes or force inhibition had an effect on the Ca2+ sensitivity of dichroism. In contrast, increasing SL increased the Ca2+ sensitivity of both force and dichroism in skinned trabeculae. Furthermore, inhibition of force caused decreased Ca2+ sensitivity of dichroism, decreased dichroism at saturating [Ca2+], and loss of the influence of SL in cardiac muscle. The data indicate that in skeletal fibers SL-dependent shifts in the Ca2+ sensitivity of force are not caused by corresponding changes in Ca2+ binding to TnC and that strong cross-bridge binding has little effect on TnC structure at any SL or level of activation. On the other hand, in cardiac muscle, both force and activation-dependent changes in cTnC structure were influenced by SL. Additionally, the effect of SL on cardiac muscle activation was itself dependent on active, cycling cross-bridges.  相似文献   

18.
Myosin-binding protein-C (MyBP-C) is a thick filament-associated protein that binds tightly to myosin. Given that cMyBP-C may act to modulate cooperative activation of the thin filament by constraining the availability of myosin cross-bridges for binding to actin, we investigated the role of MyBP-C in the regulation of cardiac muscle contraction. We assessed the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force (pCa(50)) and the activation dependence of the rate of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in skinned myocardium isolated from wild-type (WT) and cMyBP-C null (cMyBP-C(-/-)) mice. Mechanical measurements were performed at 22 degrees C in the absence and presence of a strong-binding, nonforce-generating analog of myosin subfragment-1 (NEM-S1). In the absence of NEM-S1, maximal force and k(tr) and the pCa(50) of isometric force did not differ between WT and cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium; however, ablation of cMyBP-C-accelerated k(tr) at each submaximal force. Treatment of WT and cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium with 3 muM NEM-S1 elicited similar increases in pCa(50,) but the effects of NEM-S1 to increase k(tr) at submaximal forces and thereby markedly reduce the activation dependence of k(tr) occurred to a greater degree in cMyBP-C(-/-) myocardium. Together, these results support the idea that cMyBP-C normally acts to constrain the interaction between myosin and actin, which in turn limits steady-state force development and the kinetics of cross-bridge interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Intrinsic troponin C (TnC) was extracted from small bundles of rabbit psoas fibers and replaced with TnC labeled with dansylaziridine (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl). The flourescence of incorporated dansylaziridine-labeled TnC was enhanced by the binding of Ca2+ to the Ca2+-specific (regulatory) sites of TnC and was measured simultaneously with force (Zot, H.G., Güth, K., and Potter, J.D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 15883-15890). Various myosin cross-bridge states also altered the fluorescence of dansylaziridine-labeled TnC in the filament, with cycling cross-bridges having a greater effect than rigor cross-bridges; and in both cases, there was an additional effect of Ca2+. The paired fluorescence and tension data were used to calculate the apparent Ca2+ affinity of the regulatory sites in the thin filament and were shown to increase at least 10-fold during muscle activation presumably due to the interaction of cycling cross-bridges with the thin filament. The cross-bridge state responsible for this enhanced Ca2+ affinity was shown to be the myosin-ADP state present only when cross-bridges are cycling. The steepness of the pCa force curves (where pCa represents the -log of the free Ca2+ concentration) obtained in the presence of ATP at short and long sarcomere lengths was the same, suggesting that cooperative interactions between adjacent troponin-tropomyosin units may spread along much of the actin filament when cross-bridges are attached to it. In contrast to the cycling cross-bridges, rigor bridges only increased the Ca2+ affinity of the regulatory sites 2-fold. Taken together, the results presented here indicate a strong coupling between the Ca2+ regulatory sites and cross-bridge interactions with the thin filament.  相似文献   

20.
The process of phosphate dissociation during the muscle cross-bridge cycle has been investigated by photoliberation of inorganic phosphate (Pi) within skinned fibers of rabbit psoas muscle. This permitted a test of the idea that Ca2+ controls muscle contraction by regulating the Pi release step of the cycle. Photoliberation of Pi from structurally distinct "caged" Pi precursors initiated a rapid tension decline of up to 12% of active tension, and this was followed by a slower tension decline. The apparent rate constant of the fast phase, kPi, depended on both [Pi] and [Ca2+], whereas the slow phase generally occurred at 2-4 s-1. At maximal Ca2+, kPi increased in a nonlinear manner from 43 +/- 2 s-1 to 118 +/- 7 s-1, as Pi was raised from 0.9 to 12 mM. This was analyzed in terms of a three-state kinetic model in which a force-generating transition is coupled to Pi dissociation from the cross-bridge. As Ca(2+)-activated tension was reduced from maximal (Pmax) to 0.1 Pmax, (i) kPi decreased by up to 2.5-fold, (ii) the relative amplitude of the rapid phase increased 2-fold, and (iii) the relative amplitude of the slow phase increased about 6-fold. Changes in the rapid phase are compatible with Ca2+ influencing an apparent equilibrium constant for the force-generating transition. By comparison, kPi was faster than the rate constant of tension redevelopment, ktr, and was influenced less by Ca2+. Ca2+ effects on the caged Pi transient cannot account for the large effects of Ca2+ on actomyosin ATPase rates or cross-bridge cycling kinetics but may be a manifestation of reciprocal interactions between the thin filament and force-generating cross-bridges, and may represent Ca2+ regulation of the distribution of cross-bridges between non-force-and force-generating states.  相似文献   

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