Cardiac and skeletal actin substrates uniquely tune cardiac myosin strain-dependent mechanics.

Open Biol

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Mayo Clinic Rochester, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

Published: November 2018

Cardiac ventricular myosin (βmys) translates actin by transducing ATP free energy into mechanical work during muscle contraction. Unitary βmys translation of actin is the step-size. and βmys regulates contractile force and velocity autonomously by remixing three different step-sizes with adaptive stepping frequencies. Cardiac and skeletal actin isoforms have a specific 1 : 4 stoichiometry in normal adult human ventriculum. Human adults with inheritable hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) upregulate skeletal actin in ventriculum probably compensating the diseased muscle's inability to meet demand by adjusting βmys force-velocity characteristics. βmys force-velocity characteristics were compared for skeletal versus cardiac actin substrates using ensemble motility and single myosin assays. Two competing myosin strain-sensitive mechanisms regulate step-size choices dividing single βmys mechanics into low- and high-force regimes. The actin isoforms alter myosin strain-sensitive regulation such that onset of the high-force regime, where a short step-size is a large or major contributor, is offset to higher loads probably by the unique cardiac essential light chain (ELC) N-terminus/cardiac actin contact at Glu6/Ser358. It modifies βmys force-velocity by stabilizing the ELC N-terminus/cardiac actin association. Uneven onset of the high-force regime for skeletal versus cardiac actin modulates force-velocity characteristics as skeletal/cardiac actin fractional content increases in diseased muscle.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6282072PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsob.180143DOI Listing

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