TY - JOUR
T1 - Titin-actin interaction in mouse myocardium
T2 - Passive tension modulation and its regulation by calcium/S100A1
AU - Yamasaki, R.
AU - Berri, M.
AU - Wu, Y.
AU - Trombitás, K.
AU - McNabb, M.
AU - Kellermayer, M. S.Z.
AU - Witt, C.
AU - Labeit, D.
AU - Labeit, S.
AU - Greaser, M.
AU - Granzier, H.
N1 - Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the following sources: The American Heart Association, Northwest Affiliate (predoctoral fellowship to R.Y.), the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (La 668/6-1 to S.L.), the Hungarian Science Foundation (OTKA F025353 to M.S.Z.K.), and the National Institutes of Health (HL61497 and HL62881 to H.G. and HL62466 to M.G.). M.S.Z.K. is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Research Scholar and is a recipient of the Bolyai János Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. I91–I98 and I91–I94 plasmids were kindly provided by Dr. M. Gautel. Thanks to A. Yamasaki for help in performing binding assays, and to Drs. B. Slinker and C. Omoto for comments on the manuscript.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - Passive tension in striated muscles derives primarily from the extension of the giant protein titin. However, several studies have suggested that, in cardiac muscle, interactions between titin and actin might also contribute to passive tension. We expressed recombinant fragments representing the subdomains of the extensible region of cardiac N2B titin (tandem-Ig segments, the N2B splice element, and the PEVK domain), and assayed them for binding to F-actin. The PEVK fragment bound F-actin, but no binding was detected for the other fragments. Comparison with a skeletal muscle PEVK fragment revealed that only the cardiac PEVK binds actin at physiological ionic strengths. The significance of PEVK-actin interaction was investigated using in vitro motility and single-myocyte mechanics. As F-actin slid relative to titin in the motility assay, a dynamic interaction between the PEVK domain and F-actin retarded filament sliding. Myocyte results suggest that a similar interaction makes a significant contribution to the passive tension. We also investigated the effect of calcium on PEVK-actin interaction. Although calcium alone had no effect, S100A1, a soluble calcium-binding protein found at high concentrations in the myocardium, inhibited PEVK-actin interaction in a calcium-dependent manner. Gel overlay analysis revealed that S100A1 bound the PEVK region in vitro in a calcium-dependent manner, and S100A1 binding was observed at several sites along titin's extensible region in situ, including the PEVK domain. In vitro motility results indicate that S100A1-PEVK interaction reduces the force that arises as F-actin slides relative to the PEVK domain, and we speculate that S100A1 may provide a mechanism to free the thin filament from titin and reduce titin-based tension before active contraction.
AB - Passive tension in striated muscles derives primarily from the extension of the giant protein titin. However, several studies have suggested that, in cardiac muscle, interactions between titin and actin might also contribute to passive tension. We expressed recombinant fragments representing the subdomains of the extensible region of cardiac N2B titin (tandem-Ig segments, the N2B splice element, and the PEVK domain), and assayed them for binding to F-actin. The PEVK fragment bound F-actin, but no binding was detected for the other fragments. Comparison with a skeletal muscle PEVK fragment revealed that only the cardiac PEVK binds actin at physiological ionic strengths. The significance of PEVK-actin interaction was investigated using in vitro motility and single-myocyte mechanics. As F-actin slid relative to titin in the motility assay, a dynamic interaction between the PEVK domain and F-actin retarded filament sliding. Myocyte results suggest that a similar interaction makes a significant contribution to the passive tension. We also investigated the effect of calcium on PEVK-actin interaction. Although calcium alone had no effect, S100A1, a soluble calcium-binding protein found at high concentrations in the myocardium, inhibited PEVK-actin interaction in a calcium-dependent manner. Gel overlay analysis revealed that S100A1 bound the PEVK region in vitro in a calcium-dependent manner, and S100A1 binding was observed at several sites along titin's extensible region in situ, including the PEVK domain. In vitro motility results indicate that S100A1-PEVK interaction reduces the force that arises as F-actin slides relative to the PEVK domain, and we speculate that S100A1 may provide a mechanism to free the thin filament from titin and reduce titin-based tension before active contraction.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0006-3495(01)75876-6
DO - 10.1016/S0006-3495(01)75876-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 11566799
AN - SCOPUS:0034811015
SN - 0006-3495
VL - 81
SP - 2297
EP - 2313
JO - Biophysical Journal
JF - Biophysical Journal
IS - 4
ER -