Abstract

Muscle energetics reflects the ability of myosin motors to convert chemical energy into mechanical energy. How this process takes place remains one of the most elusive questions in the field. Here, we combined experimental measurements of in vitro sliding velocity based on DNA-origami built filaments carrying myosins with different lever arm length and Monte Carlo simulations based on a model which accounts for three basic components: (i) the geometrical hindrance, (ii) the mechano-sensing mechanism, and (iii) the biased kinetics for stretched or compressed motors. The model simulations showed that the geometrical hindrance due to acto-myosin spatial mismatching and the preferential detachment of compressed motors are synergic in generating the rapid increase in the ATP-ase rate from isometric to moderate velocities of contraction, thus acting as an energy-conservation strategy in muscle contraction. The velocity measurements on a DNA-origami filament that preserves the motors’ distribution showed that geometrical hindrance and biased detachment generate a non-zero sliding velocity even without rotation of the myosin lever-arm, which is widely recognized as the basic event in muscle contraction. Because biased detachment is a mechanism for the rectification of thermal fluctuations, in the Brownian-ratchet framework, we predict that it requires a non-negligible amount of energy to preserve the second law of thermodynamics. Taken together, our theoretical and experimental results elucidate less considered components in the chemo-mechanical energy transduction in muscle.

Highlights

  • The smallest contractile unit in muscle, the half-sarcomere, reduces its length through the sliding of thin filaments, which are formed by actin monomers, relatively to thick filaments, which are formed by a structured arrangement of myosin II motors [1,2,3]

  • This process is powered by hydrolyzation of the high-energy molecule adenosine triphosphate (ATP) into adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and phosphate (Pi)

  • We showed that the geometrical hindrance and the biased detachment synergistically act to reproduce the steep increase of the ATP-ase rate

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. It is widely accepted that this relative motion is generated by the cyclical interaction of myosin motors with actin monomers, which includes attachment and biased rotation of the lever-arm, which generates force, and detachment (Figure 1A, “active cycle”) [4]. This process is powered by hydrolyzation of the high-energy molecule adenosine triphosphate (ATP) into adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and phosphate (Pi). Sci. 2021, 22, 7037 myosin motors converting ATP chemical energy into mechanical energy How this process takes place is one of the most elusive questions in this field

Cross-bridge
Results
Methods andwithout
Materials and Methods
Construction of DNA Origami
Myosin Construct
Protein Expression and Purification
Oligonucleotide Labeling to Myosin
Labeling of Qdot to Actin Filament
Observation of Actin Sliding along DNA-Origami Thick Filament
Sliding Filament Model
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