AI Article Synopsis

  • The heart's ability to pump effectively is influenced by myofilament power generation, which is determined by the force and velocity of heart muscle contractions at the sarcomere level.
  • Previous research indicated that PKA-mediated phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins could boost power in rodent heart cells, and this study confirmed a similar 30% increase in human heart cells from patients with heart failure.
  • Specific alterations in cardiac troponin I, particularly pseudo-phosphorylation at certain sites, were found to enhance power output in both rat skeletal muscle and human heart muscle, suggesting that targeting these molecular changes could improve heart function in failing hearts.

Article Abstract

The heart's pumping capacity is determined by myofilament power generation. Power is work done per unit time and measured as the product of force and velocity. At a sarcomere level, these contractile properties are linked to the number of attached cross-bridges and their cycling rate, and many signaling pathways modulate one or both factors. We previously showed that power is increased in rodent permeabilized cardiac myocytes following PKA-mediated phosphorylation of myofibrillar proteins. The current study found that that PKA increased power by ∼30% in permeabilized cardiac myocyte preparations (n = 8) from human failing hearts. To address myofilament molecular specificity of PKA effects, mechanical properties were measured in rat permeabilized slow-twitch skeletal muscle fibers before and after exchange of endogenous slow skeletal troponin with recombinant human Tn complex that contains cardiac (c)TnT, cTnC and either wildtype (WT) cTnI or pseudo-phosphorylated cTnI at sites Ser23/24Asp, Tyr26Glu, or the combinatorial Ser23/24Asp and Tyr26Glu. We found that cTnI Ser23/24Asp, Tyr26Glu, and combinatorial Ser23/24Asp and Tyr26Glu were sufficient to increase power by ∼20%. Next, we determined whether pseudo-phosphorylated cTnI at Ser23/24 was sufficient to increase power in cardiac myocytes from human failing hearts. Following cTn exchange that included cTnI Ser23/24Asp, power output increased ∼20% in permeabilized cardiac myocyte preparations (n = 6) from the left ventricle of human failing hearts. These results implicate cTnI N-terminal phosphorylation as a molecular regulator of myocyte power and could serve as a regional target for small molecule therapy to unmask myocyte power reserve capacity in human failing hearts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10067705PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1085/jgp.202213290DOI Listing

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