Abstract

Human hearts with reduced or mutant myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) undergo hypertrophy and dilation, suggesting that reduction or alteration of MyBP-C interferes with normal contraction. Extraction of 60-70% of MyBP-C over 1 h from a mechanically disrupted cardiac myocyte has been shown to increase Ca sensitivity but does not appear to impair development of maximum Ca-activated force (Fmax). To determine whether loss of MyBP-C over a longer period of time will decrease force development in a reversible manner, MyBP-C has been extracted from chemically skinned rat cardiac trabeculae for 1-4 h, and force production, Ca sensitivity, and thick filament structure were measured. Although extraction of MyBP-C for 1 h did not alter Fmax, after 4 h, myosin heads became disordered and Fmax decreased. At this point, incubation of the trabeculae with rat cardiac MyBP-C in a relaxing solution reversed the decline in Fmax and most of the change in order of myosin heads. Extraction of MyBP-C appears to produce a change in the orientation of myosin heads that is associated with a decreased ability of the contractile system to develop force.

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