Abstract

It has been shown that not only calcium but also strong binding myosin heads contribute to thin filament activation in isometrically contracting animal fast-twitch and cardiac muscle preparations. This behavior has not been studied in human muscle fibers or animal slow-twitch fibers. Human slow-twitch fibers are interesting since they contain the same myosin heavy chain isoform as the human heart. To explore myosin-induced activation of the thin filament in isometrically contracting human slow-twitch fibers, the endogenous troponin complex was exchanged for a well-characterized fast-twitch skeletal troponin complex labeled with the fluorescent dye N-((2-(Iodoacetoxy)ethyl)-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (fsTn-IANBD). The exchange was ≈70% complete (n = 8). The relative contributions of calcium and strong binding cross-bridges to thin filament activation were dissected by increasing the concentration of calcium from relaxing (pCa 7.5) to saturating levels (pCa 4.5) before and after incubating the exchanged fibers in the myosin inhibitor para-aminoblebbistatin (AmBleb). At pCa 4.5, the relative contributions of calcium and strong binding cross-bridges to thin filament activation were ≈69 and ≈31%, respectively. Additionally, switching from isometric to isotonic contraction at pCa 4.5 revealed that strong binding cross-bridges contributed ≈29% to thin filament activation (i.e., virtually the same magnitude obtained with AmBleb). Thus, we showed through two different approaches that lowering the number of strong binding cross-bridges, at saturating calcium, significantly reduced the activation of the thin filament in human slow-twitch fibers. The contribution of myosin to activation resembled that which was previously reported in rat cardiac and rabbit fast-twitch muscle preparations. This method could be applied to slow-twitch human fibers obtained from the soleus muscle of cardiomyopathy patients. Such studies could lead to a better understanding of the effect of point mutations of the cardiac myosin head on the regulation of muscle contraction and could lead to better management by pharmacological approaches.

Highlights

  • Mammalian muscles are either smooth or striated

  • We show by two different approaches, that at submaximal and maximal calcium concentrations, strong binding states of cycling cross-bridges significantly contribute to thin filament activation in human slow-twitch muscle fibers

  • To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study exploring this issue in slowtwitch skeletal muscle, which completes the view that myosininduced activation is a conserved phenomenon in striated muscle, including human tissue

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Summary

Introduction

Mammalian muscles are either smooth or striated. Striated muscles are further classified as cardiac, fast-twitch skeletal, and slow-twitch skeletal. Activation of all striated muscles are triggered by increases in intracellular calcium concentration but the mechanism of regulation and contribution of myosin to activation differs among the muscle types (Gordon et al, 2000; Schiaffino and Reggiani, 2011; Shadrin et al, 2016). These differences in mechanism provide us with the possibility of selectively altering the activity of a particular muscle type in order to treat disease. One incompletely resolved issue of regulation is the role that actively cycling cross-bridges play in activation of the thin filament in striated muscle, in slow-twitch and in human muscles

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