Abstract

Ca 2+ binding to troponin C (TnC), a subunit of the thin filament regulatory strand, activates vertebrate skeletal muscle contraction. Tension, however, increases with Ca 2+ too abruptly to be the result of binding to sites on individual TnCs. Because extraction of one TnC on average per regulatory strand dramatically reduces the slope of the tension/Ca 2+ relationship, we proposed that all 26 troponin-tropomyosin complexes of the regulatory strand form a co-operative system. This study of permeabilized (chemically skinned) rabbit psoas fibers analyzes the extraction time-course, the distribution of extraction sites on regulatory strands and the effects of extraction on the co-operativity of the tension/Ca 2+ relationship. Two components of TnC are resolved in the time-course of extraction: a “rapidly extracting” component that can be selectively removed without affecting tension or co-operativity, and a “slowly extracting” component whose loss reduces tension and co-operativity. Extraction of [ 14C]TnC shows that the slowly extracting component is lost randomly, so that, after removal of 5% of the TnC, most extracted strands have lost one TnC. Extraction interrupts the transmission of co-operativity by dividing the regulatory strand into smaller, independent co-operative systems; it reduces tension by preventing Ca 2+ activation of TnC-depleted regulatory units. Co-operativity of the tension/Ca 2+ relationship is modeled with the concerted-transition formalism for intact systems of 26 regulatory units, and for the smaller systems in extracted fibers.

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