Direct interaction between troponin and myosin enhances the ATPase activity of heavy meromyosin

Contractility of the heart muscle is a result of sliding movements between thick and thin filaments, produced by interactions between actin and myosin during the cross-bridge cycle. Activation of the myofilament is triggered by Ca 2+ binding to cardiac troponin C and is regulated through an “on/off”...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biológia 2017-06, Vol.72 (6), p.702-708
Hauptverfasser: Ghashghaee, Nazanin Bohlooli, Li, King-Lun, Dong, Wen-Ji
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Contractility of the heart muscle is a result of sliding movements between thick and thin filaments, produced by interactions between actin and myosin during the cross-bridge cycle. Activation of the myofilament is triggered by Ca 2+ binding to cardiac troponin C and is regulated through an “on/off” switching process occurring in the thin filament. Beside Ca 2+ regulation, strongly bound cross-bridges exert a positive feedback on myofilament regulation. Despite the importance of this positive feedback mechanism, its full molecular basis has so far remained elusive. Ca 2+ -regulated interactions between thick and thin filaments are widely regarded as an allosteric system, which means that multiple protein-protein interactions at their interface may exert alternative feedback effects on myofilament activation. To advance knowledge about these regulatory feedback mechanisms, we investigated a previously unstudied, hypothetical interaction between cardiac troponin and myosin, and how this interaction affects the function of myosin. Our results strongly suggest that myosin does indeed interact with the N-terminus of cardiac troponin I and the C-terminus of cardiac troponin T, suggesting a possible direct interaction between myosin and the IT-arm of troponin. We also conducted an in vitro heavy meromyosin (HMM) ATPase assay, and found that troponin significantly enhanced the actin-activated ATPase activity of HMM, both in the absence of tropomyosin and at the activated state of thin filament.
ISSN:0006-3088
1336-9563
DOI:10.1515/biolog-2017-0079