Abstract

We advance a structural model to account for the rapid elastic element seen in mechanical transient experiments on vertebrate skeletal muscle (A.F. Huxley & Simmons 1971 Nature, Lond. 233, 533-538). In contrast to other crossbridge models, ours does not envisage a myosin rod made up of two rigid portions connected by a hinge, but rather a gradually bending rod portion connecting the heads to the thick filament shaft. We propose that, in relaxed muscle, the subfragment 2 (S2) portion of the myosin rod is bound to the thick filament shaft by ionic interactions analogous to those between the light meromyosin (LMM) portions of the rod that constitute the body of the shaft. These interactions probably involve the alternating zones of positive and negative charge seen in myosin rod amino acid sequences. As the crossbridge cycle that generates tension begins, we propose that part of S2 detaches from the thick filament shaft and bends to enable the myosin head to attach to actin. When tension develops in the crossbridge, the S2 is straightened and more of it becomes detached from the shaft so that the junction between S2 and the myosin heads moves 3-4 nm axially. As tension declines at the end of the crossbridge stroke, we propose that S2 rebinds to the thick filament shaft and that this provides the restoring force to return the junction of the heads and S2 to its original axial position. Thus this movement would have the characteristics of an elastic element; detailed calculations indicate that it would have properties similar to those observed experimentally. Furthermore, this model can account for the radial attractive force seen in rigor and in contracting muscle, the decrease in stiffness when interfilament spacing is increased in skinned muscle, and the increased rate of proteolysis observed at the S2-LMM junction in contracting muscle.

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