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Identification of sequence changes in myosin II that adjust muscle contraction velocity
Authors:Chloe A. Johnson,Jake E. McGreig,Sarah T. Jeanfavre,Jonathan Walklate,Carlos D. Vera,Marta Farré  ,Daniel P. Mulvihill,Anthony J. Baines,Martin Ridout,Leslie A. Leinwand,Mark N. Wass,Michael A. Geeves
Affiliation:1. School of Biosciences, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom;2. BioFrontiers Institute and Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado, United States of America;3. School of Mathematics, Statistics and Actuarial Science, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom;University of Bergen, NORWAY
Abstract:The speed of muscle contraction is related to body size; muscles in larger species contract at slower rates. Since contraction speed is a property of the myosin isoform expressed in a muscle, we investigated how sequence changes in a range of muscle myosin II isoforms enable this slower rate of muscle contraction. We considered 798 sequences from 13 mammalian myosin II isoforms to identify any adaptation to increasing body mass. We identified a correlation between body mass and sequence divergence for the motor domain of the 4 major adult myosin II isoforms (β/Type I, IIa, IIb, and IIx), suggesting that these isoforms have adapted to increasing body mass. In contrast, the non-muscle and developmental isoforms show no correlation of sequence divergence with body mass. Analysis of the motor domain sequence of β-myosin (predominant myosin in Type I/slow and cardiac muscle) from 67 mammals from 2 distinct clades identifies 16 sites, out of 800, associated with body mass (padj < 0.05) but not with the clade (padj > 0.05). Both clades change the same small set of amino acids, in the same order from small to large mammals, suggesting a limited number of ways in which contraction velocity can be successfully manipulated. To test this relationship, the 9 sites that differ between human and rat were mutated in the human β-myosin to match the rat sequence. Biochemical analysis revealed that the rat–human β-myosin chimera functioned like the native rat myosin with a 2-fold increase in both motility and in the rate of ADP release from the actin–myosin crossbridge (the step that limits contraction velocity). Thus, these sequence changes indicate adaptation of β-myosin as species mass increased to enable a reduced contraction velocity and heart rate.

Heart and skeletal muscles of larger mammals contract more slowly than smaller ones. This study identifies amino acid changes in myosin isoforms that correlate with species size; mutating the residues in human β-myosin to match the rat sequence at these positions increased its in vitro velocity to that of the rat protein.
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