TY - JOUR
T1 - Extensibility of isoforms of cardiac titin
T2 - Variation in contour length of molecular subsegments provides a basis for cellular passive stiffness diversity
AU - Trombitás, Karoly
AU - Redkar, Alka
AU - Centner, Thomas
AU - Wu, Yiming
AU - Labeit, Siegfried
AU - Granzier, Henk
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grant La 668/5-1 (to S.L.), and the National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grants HL61497 and HL62881 (to H.G.). H.G. is an Established Investigator for the American Heart Association.
PY - 2000/12
Y1 - 2000/12
N2 - Titin is a giant polypeptide that spans between the Z- and M-lines of the cardiac muscle sarcomere and that develops force when extended. This force arises from titin's extensible I-band region, which consists mainly of three segment types: serially linked immunoglobulin-like domains (Ig segments), interrupted by the PEVK segment, and the N2B unique sequence. Recently it was reported that the myocardium of large mammals co-expresses small (N2B) and large (N2BA) cardiac isoforms and that the passive stiffness of cardiac myocytes varies with the isoform expression ratio. To understand the molecular basis of the differences in passive stiffness we investigated titin's extensibility in bovine atrium, which expresses predominantly N2BA titin, and compared it to that of rat, which expresses predominantly N2B titin. Immunoelectron microscopy was used with antibodies that flank the Ig segments, the PEVK segment, and the unique sequence of the N2B element. The extension of the various segments was then determined as a function of sarcomere length (SL). When slack sarcomeres of bovine atrium were stretched, the PEVK segment extended much more steeply and the unique N2B sequence less steeply than in rat, while the Ig segments behaved similarly in both species. However, the extensions normalized with the segment's contour length (i.e., the fractional extensions) of Ig, PEVK, and unique sequence segments all increase less steeply with SL in cow than in rat. Considering that fractional extension determines the level of entropic force, these differences in fractional extension are expected to result in shallow and steep passive force-SL curves in myocytes that express high levels of N2BA and N2B titin, respectively. Thus, the findings provide a molecular basis for passive stiffness diversity.
AB - Titin is a giant polypeptide that spans between the Z- and M-lines of the cardiac muscle sarcomere and that develops force when extended. This force arises from titin's extensible I-band region, which consists mainly of three segment types: serially linked immunoglobulin-like domains (Ig segments), interrupted by the PEVK segment, and the N2B unique sequence. Recently it was reported that the myocardium of large mammals co-expresses small (N2B) and large (N2BA) cardiac isoforms and that the passive stiffness of cardiac myocytes varies with the isoform expression ratio. To understand the molecular basis of the differences in passive stiffness we investigated titin's extensibility in bovine atrium, which expresses predominantly N2BA titin, and compared it to that of rat, which expresses predominantly N2B titin. Immunoelectron microscopy was used with antibodies that flank the Ig segments, the PEVK segment, and the unique sequence of the N2B element. The extension of the various segments was then determined as a function of sarcomere length (SL). When slack sarcomeres of bovine atrium were stretched, the PEVK segment extended much more steeply and the unique N2B sequence less steeply than in rat, while the Ig segments behaved similarly in both species. However, the extensions normalized with the segment's contour length (i.e., the fractional extensions) of Ig, PEVK, and unique sequence segments all increase less steeply with SL in cow than in rat. Considering that fractional extension determines the level of entropic force, these differences in fractional extension are expected to result in shallow and steep passive force-SL curves in myocytes that express high levels of N2BA and N2B titin, respectively. Thus, the findings provide a molecular basis for passive stiffness diversity.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0006-3495(00)76555-6
DO - 10.1016/S0006-3495(00)76555-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 11106626
AN - SCOPUS:0033637514
VL - 79
SP - 3226
EP - 3234
JO - Biophysical Journal
JF - Biophysical Journal
SN - 0006-3495
IS - 6
ER -