Abstract

We have investigated a transgenic mouse model of inherited dilated cardiomyopathy that stably expresses the ACTC E361G mutation at around 50% of total actin in the heart. F-actin isolated from ACTC E361G mouse hearts was incorporated into thin filaments with native human tropomyosin and troponin and compared with NTG mouse actin by in vitro motility assay. There was no significant difference in sliding speed, fraction of filaments motile or Ca 2+-sensitivity (ratio EC 50 E361G/NTG = 0.95 ± 0.08). The Ca 2+-sensitivity of force in skinned trabeculae from ACTC E361G mice was slightly higher than NTG (EC 50 E361G/NTG = 0.78 ± 0.04). The molecular phenotype was revealed when troponin was dephosphorylated; Ca 2+-sensitivity of E361G-containing thin filaments was now lower than NTG (EC 50 E361G dPTn/NTG dPTn = 2.15 ± 0.09). We demonstrated that this was due to uncoupling of Ca 2+-sensitivity from troponin I phosphorylation by comparing Ca 2+-sensitivity of phosphorylated and dephosphorylated thin filaments. For NTG actin-containing thin filaments EC 50 native/dPTn = 3.0 ± 0.3 but for E361G-containing thin filaments EC 50 native/dPTn = 1.04 ± 0.07.We studied contractility in isolated myocytes and found no significant differences under basal conditions. We measured cardiac performance by cine-MRI, echocardiography and with a conductance catheter over a period of 4 to 18 months and found minimal systematic differences between NTG and ACTC E361G mice under basal conditions. However, the increase in septal thickening, ejection fraction, heart rate and cardiac output following dobutamine treatment was significantly less in ACTC E361G mice compared with NTG. We propose that the ACTC E361G mutation uncouples myofilament Ca 2+-sensitivity from Troponin I phosphorylation and blunts the response to adrenergic stimulation, leading to a reduced cardiac reserve with consequent contractile dysfunction under stress, leading to dilated cardiomyopathy.

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