In this review we discuss the history and the current state of ideas related to the mechanism of size regulation of the thick (myosin) and thin (actin) filaments in vertebrate striated muscles. Various hypotheses have been considered during of more than half century of research, recently mostly involving titin and nebulin acting as templates or 'molecular rulers', terminating exact assembly. These two giant, single-polypeptide, filamentous proteins are bound in situ along the thick and thin filaments, respectively, with an almost perfect match in the respective lengths and structural periodicities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSkeletal and cardiac muscles are remarkable biological machines that support and move our bodies and power the rhythmic work of our lungs and hearts. As well as producing active contractile force, muscles are also passively elastic, which is essential to their performance. The origins of both active contractile and passive elastic forces can be traced to the individual proteins that make up the highly ordered structure of muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe giant protein titin is thought to play major roles in the assembly and function of muscle sarcomeres. Structural details, such as widths of Z- and M-lines and periodicities in the thick filaments, correlate with the substructure in the respective regions of the titin molecule. Sarcomere rest length, its operating range of lengths, and passive elastic properties are also directly controlled by the properties of titin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTitin is a giant protein of striated muscle with important roles in the assembly, intracellular signalling and passive mechanical properties of sarcomeres. The molecule consists principally of approximately 300 immunoglobulin and fibronectin domains arranged in a chain more than 1 mum long. The isoform-dependent N-terminal part of the molecule forms an elastic connection between the end of the thick filament and the Z-line.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent studies at the single-molecule level show how signaling from the giant protein titin can be triggered by direct mechanical activation of its kinase domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe giant protein titin has important roles in muscle sarcomere integrity, elasticity and contractile activity. The key role in elasticity was highlighted in recent years by single-molecule mechanical studies, which showed a direct relationship between the non-uniform structure of titin and the hierarchical mechanism of its force-extension behavior. Further advances in understanding mechanisms controlling sarcomere structure and elasticity require detailed knowledge of titin arrangement and interactions in situ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Muscle Res Cell Motil
January 2007
Recent progress in understanding the role of titin/connectin in muscle elasticity has been heavily based on results from single molecule mechanical experiments. The shape of force-extension curves from such data is similar to curves from muscle fibres and it has been tempting to assume that muscle elasticity can be extrapolated directly from the single molecule data. In this paper we discuss some of the factors that act on titin in the sarcomere that are likely to preclude such a direct extrapolation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe persistence length of titin from rabbit skeletal muscles was measured using a combination of static and dynamic light scattering, and neutron small angle scattering. Values of persistence length in the range 9-16 nm were found for titin-II, which corresponds to mainly physiologically inelastic A-band part of the protein, and for a proteolytic fragment with 100-nm contour length from the physiologically elastic I-band part. The ratio of the hydrodynamic radius to the static radius of gyration indicates that the proteins obey Gaussian statistics typical of a flexible polymer in a -solvent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn striated muscles, the rapid production of macroscopic levels of force and displacement stems directly from highly ordered and hierarchical protein organization, with the sarcomere as the elemental contractile unit. There is now a wealth of evidence indicating that the giant elastic protein titin has important roles in controlling the structure and extensibility of vertebrate muscle sarcomeres.
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