Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 60
Filtrar
Más filtros

Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Nature ; 623(7988): 853-862, 2023 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37914935

RESUMEN

Pumping of the heart is powered by filaments of the motor protein myosin that pull on actin filaments to generate cardiac contraction. In addition to myosin, the filaments contain cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C), which modulates contractility in response to physiological stimuli, and titin, which functions as a scaffold for filament assembly1. Myosin, cMyBP-C and titin are all subject to mutation, which can lead to heart failure. Despite the central importance of cardiac myosin filaments to life, their molecular structure has remained a mystery for 60 years2. Here we solve the structure of the main (cMyBP-C-containing) region of the human cardiac filament using cryo-electron microscopy. The reconstruction reveals the architecture of titin and cMyBP-C and shows how myosin's motor domains (heads) form three different types of motif (providing functional flexibility), which interact with each other and with titin and cMyBP-C to dictate filament architecture and function. The packing of myosin tails in the filament backbone is also resolved. The structure suggests how cMyBP-C helps to generate the cardiac super-relaxed state3; how titin and cMyBP-C may contribute to length-dependent activation4; and how mutations in myosin and cMyBP-C might disturb interactions, causing disease5,6. The reconstruction resolves past uncertainties and integrates previous data on cardiac muscle structure and function. It provides a new paradigm for interpreting structural, physiological and clinical observations, and for the design of potential therapeutic drugs.


Asunto(s)
Miosinas Cardíacas , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Miocardio , Humanos , Miosinas Cardíacas/química , Miosinas Cardíacas/metabolismo , Miosinas Cardíacas/ultraestructura , Proteínas Portadoras/química , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Proteínas Portadoras/ultraestructura , Conectina/química , Conectina/metabolismo , Conectina/ultraestructura , Miocardio/química , Miocardio/ultraestructura
2.
Nature ; 588(7838): 521-525, 2020 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33268893

RESUMEN

Myosin II is the motor protein that enables muscle cells to contract and nonmuscle cells to move and change shape1. The molecule has two identical heads attached to an elongated tail, and can exist in two conformations: 10S and 6S, named for their sedimentation coefficients2,3. The 6S conformation has an extended tail and assembles into polymeric filaments, which pull on actin filaments to generate force and motion. In 10S myosin, the tail is folded into three segments and the heads bend back and interact with each other and the tail3-7, creating a compact conformation in which ATPase activity, actin activation and filament assembly are all highly inhibited7,8. This switched-off structure appears to function as a key energy-conserving storage molecule in muscle and nonmuscle cells9-12, which can be activated to form functional filaments as needed13-but the mechanism of its inhibition is not understood. Here we have solved the structure of smooth muscle 10S myosin by cryo-electron microscopy with sufficient resolution to enable improved understanding of the function of the head and tail regions of the molecule and of the key intramolecular contacts that cause inhibition. Our results suggest an atomic model for the off state of myosin II, for its activation and unfolding by phosphorylation, and for understanding the clustering of disease-causing mutations near sites of intramolecular interaction.


Asunto(s)
Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Miosina Tipo II/antagonistas & inhibidores , Miosina Tipo II/ultraestructura , Animales , Sitios de Unión , Modelos Moleculares , Músculo Liso/química , Mutación , Miosina Tipo II/química , Miosina Tipo II/genética , Fosforilación , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Desplegamiento Proteico , Pavos
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(22): 11865-11874, 2020 06 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32444484

RESUMEN

Striated muscle contraction involves sliding of actin thin filaments along myosin thick filaments, controlled by calcium through thin filament activation. In relaxed muscle, the two heads of myosin interact with each other on the filament surface to form the interacting-heads motif (IHM). A key question is how both heads are released from the surface to approach actin and produce force. We used time-resolved synchrotron X-ray diffraction to study tarantula muscle before and after tetani. The patterns showed that the IHM is present in live relaxed muscle. Tetanic contraction produced only a very small backbone elongation, implying that mechanosensing-proposed in vertebrate muscle-is not of primary importance in tarantula. Rather, thick filament activation results from increases in myosin phosphorylation that release a fraction of heads to produce force, with the remainder staying in the ordered IHM configuration. After the tetanus, the released heads slowly recover toward the resting, helically ordered state. During this time the released heads remain close to actin and can quickly rebind, enhancing the force produced by posttetanic twitches, structurally explaining posttetanic potentiation. Taken together, these results suggest that, in addition to stretch activation in insects, two other mechanisms for thick filament activation have evolved to disrupt the interactions that establish the relaxed helices of IHMs: one in invertebrates, by either regulatory light-chain phosphorylation (as in arthropods) or Ca2+-binding (in mollusks, lacking phosphorylation), and another in vertebrates, by mechanosensing.


Asunto(s)
Músculo Estriado/fisiología , Miosinas/metabolismo , Fosforilación/fisiología , Citoesqueleto de Actina/química , Citoesqueleto de Actina/metabolismo , Animales , Artrópodos/fisiología , Evolución Molecular , Invertebrados/fisiología , Modelos Moleculares , Contracción Muscular , Relajación Muscular , Miosinas/química , Estructura Secundaria de Proteína , Arañas/fisiología , Vertebrados/fisiología
4.
Biophys J ; 121(8): 1354-1366, 2022 04 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35318005

RESUMEN

Electron microscopy (EM) shows that myosin heads in thick filaments isolated from striated muscles interact with each other and with the myosin tail under relaxing conditions. This "interacting-heads motif" (IHM) is highly conserved across the animal kingdom and is thought to be the basis of the super-relaxed state. However, a recent X-ray modeling study concludes, contrary to expectation, that the IHM is not present in relaxed intact muscle. We propose that this conclusion results from modeling with a thick filament 3D reconstruction in which the myosin heads have radially collapsed onto the thick filament backbone, not from absence of the IHM. Such radial collapse, by about 3-4 nm, is well established in EM studies of negatively stained myosin filaments, on which the reconstruction was based. We have tested this idea by carrying out similar X-ray modeling and determining the effect of the radial position of the heads on the goodness of fit to the X-ray pattern. We find that, when the IHM is modeled into a thick filament at a radius 3-4 nm greater than that modeled in the recent study, there is good agreement with the X-ray pattern. When the original (collapsed) radial position is used, the fit is poor, in agreement with that study. We show that modeling of the low-angle region of the X-ray pattern is relatively insensitive to the conformation of the myosin heads but very sensitive to their radial distance from the filament axis. We conclude that the IHM is sufficient to explain the X-ray diffraction pattern of intact muscle when placed at the appropriate radius.


Asunto(s)
Miosinas , Vertebrados , Citoesqueleto de Actina , Animales , Músculo Esquelético , Difracción de Rayos X
5.
Circulation ; 141(10): 828-842, 2020 03 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31983222

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is caused by pathogenic variants in sarcomere protein genes that evoke hypercontractility, poor relaxation, and increased energy consumption by the heart and increased patient risks for arrhythmias and heart failure. Recent studies show that pathogenic missense variants in myosin, the molecular motor of the sarcomere, are clustered in residues that participate in dynamic conformational states of sarcomere proteins. We hypothesized that these conformations are essential to adapt contractile output for energy conservation and that pathophysiology of HCM results from destabilization of these conformations. METHODS: We assayed myosin ATP binding to define the proportion of myosins in the super relaxed state (SRX) conformation or the disordered relaxed state (DRX) conformation in healthy rodent and human hearts, at baseline and in response to reduced hemodynamic demands of hibernation or pathogenic HCM variants. To determine the relationships between myosin conformations, sarcomere function, and cell biology, we assessed contractility, relaxation, and cardiomyocyte morphology and metabolism, with and without an allosteric modulator of myosin ATPase activity. We then tested whether the positions of myosin variants of unknown clinical significance that were identified in patients with HCM, predicted functional consequences and associations with heart failure and arrhythmias. RESULTS: Myosins undergo physiological shifts between the SRX conformation that maximizes energy conservation and the DRX conformation that enables cross-bridge formation with greater ATP consumption. Systemic hemodynamic requirements, pharmacological modulators of myosin, and pathogenic myosin missense mutations influenced the proportions of these conformations. Hibernation increased the proportion of myosins in the SRX conformation, whereas pathogenic variants destabilized these and increased the proportion of myosins in the DRX conformation, which enhanced cardiomyocyte contractility, but impaired relaxation and evoked hypertrophic remodeling with increased energetic stress. Using structural locations to stratify variants of unknown clinical significance, we showed that the variants that destabilized myosin conformations were associated with higher rates of heart failure and arrhythmias in patients with HCM. CONCLUSIONS: Myosin conformations establish work-energy equipoise that is essential for life-long cellular homeostasis and heart function. Destabilization of myosin energy-conserving states promotes contractile abnormalities, morphological and metabolic remodeling, and adverse clinical outcomes in patients with HCM. Therapeutic restabilization corrects cellular contractile and metabolic phenotypes and may limit these adverse clinical outcomes in patients with HCM.


Asunto(s)
Miosinas Cardíacas/genética , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/metabolismo , Mutación Missense/genética , Miocitos Cardíacos/fisiología , Cadenas Pesadas de Miosina/genética , Sarcómeros/metabolismo , Adenosina Trifosfatasas , Animales , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/genética , Células Cultivadas , Metabolismo Energético , Humanos , Células Madre Pluripotentes Inducidas/citología , Ratones , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Relajación Muscular , Contracción Miocárdica , Miocitos Cardíacos/citología , Conformación Proteica , Sarcómeros/genética
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(9): E1991-E2000, 2018 02 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29444861

RESUMEN

Electron microscope studies have shown that the switched-off state of myosin II in muscle involves intramolecular interaction between the two heads of myosin and between one head and the tail. The interaction, seen in both myosin filaments and isolated molecules, inhibits activity by blocking actin-binding and ATPase sites on myosin. This interacting-heads motif is highly conserved, occurring in invertebrates and vertebrates, in striated, smooth, and nonmuscle myosin IIs, and in myosins regulated by both Ca2+ binding and regulatory light-chain phosphorylation. Our goal was to determine how early this motif arose by studying the structure of inhibited myosin II molecules from primitive animals and from earlier, unicellular species that predate animals. Myosin II from Cnidaria (sea anemones, jellyfish), the most primitive animals with muscles, and Porifera (sponges), the most primitive of all animals (lacking muscle tissue) showed the same interacting-heads structure as myosins from higher animals, confirming the early origin of the motif. The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum showed a similar, but modified, version of the motif, while the amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii and fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe) showed no head-head interaction, consistent with the different sequences and regulatory mechanisms of these myosins compared with animal myosin IIs. Our results suggest that head-head/head-tail interactions have been conserved, with slight modifications, as a mechanism for regulating myosin II activity from the emergence of the first animals and before. The early origins of these interactions highlight their importance in generating the inhibited (relaxed) state of myosin in muscle and nonmuscle cells.


Asunto(s)
Miosina Tipo II/antagonistas & inhibidores , Actinas/química , Adenosina Trifosfato/química , Secuencias de Aminoácidos , Animales , Evolución Biológica , Calcio/química , Línea Celular , Biología Computacional , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Dictyostelium , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Insectos , Microscopía Electrónica , Miosina Tipo II/química , Fosforilación , Poríferos , Unión Proteica , Schizosaccharomyces , Escifozoos , Anémonas de Mar , Pavos
7.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 524(1): 198-204, 2020 03 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31983430

RESUMEN

Thick filaments from some striated muscles are regulated by phosphorylation of myosin regulatory light chains (RLCs). A tarantula thick filament quasi-atomic model achieved by cryo-electron microscopy has advanced our understanding on how this regulation occurs. In native thick filaments, an asymmetric intramolecular interaction between the actin-binding region of one myosin head ("blocked") and the converter region of the other head ("free") switches both heads off, establishing the myosin interacting-heads motif (IHM). This structural finding, together with motility assays, sequence analysis, and mass spectrometry (MS) observations have suggested a cooperative phosphorylation activation (CPA) mechanism for thick filament activation. In the CPA mechanism, some myosin free heads are phosphorylated constitutively in Ser35 by protein kinase C (PKC) and -under Ca2+ control - others (free or blocked) heads temporally on Ser45 by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), in a way that explains both force development and post-tetanic potentiation in tarantula striated muscle. We tested this model using MS to verify if Ca2+-activation phosphorylates de novo un-phosphorylated Ser35 heads. For this purpose, we standardized an approach based on 18O isotopic ATP labeling to accurately detect by MS-MS the RLC phosphorylation under Ca2+-activation. MS spectra showed de novo18O incorporation only on Ser45 but not on Ser35. As the constitutive Ser35 phosphorylation cannot be dephosphorylated, this result suggests that the number of RLCs on free heads with constitutively phosphorylated Ser35 does remain constant on Ca2+-activation supporting that the myosin has a basal activation and force modulation or potentiation is controlled by MLCK Ser45 phosphorylation.


Asunto(s)
Marcaje Isotópico , Miosinas/metabolismo , Isótopos de Oxígeno/metabolismo , Serina/metabolismo , Arañas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Cadenas Ligeras de Miosina/química , Cadenas Ligeras de Miosina/metabolismo , Péptidos/química , Péptidos/metabolismo , Fosforilación
8.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(42): E5660-8, 2015 Oct 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26443857

RESUMEN

Muscle tissues are classically divided into two major types, depending on the presence or absence of striations. In striated muscles, the actin filaments are anchored at Z-lines and the myosin and actin filaments are in register, whereas in smooth muscles, the actin filaments are attached to dense bodies and the myosin and actin filaments are out of register. The structure of the filaments in smooth muscles is also different from that in striated muscles. Here we have studied the structure of myosin filaments from the smooth muscles of the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni. We find, surprisingly, that they are indistinguishable from those in an arthropod striated muscle. This structural similarity is supported by sequence comparison between the schistosome myosin II heavy chain and known striated muscle myosins. In contrast, the actin filaments of schistosomes are similar to those of smooth muscles, lacking troponin-dependent regulation. We conclude that schistosome muscles are hybrids, containing striated muscle-like myosin filaments and smooth muscle-like actin filaments in a smooth muscle architecture. This surprising finding has broad significance for understanding how muscles are built and how they evolved, and challenges the paradigm that smooth and striated muscles always have distinctly different components.


Asunto(s)
Músculo Liso/metabolismo , Miosinas/metabolismo , Schistosoma mansoni/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Microscopía Electrónica , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Músculo Liso/ultraestructura , Miosinas/química , Filogenia , Homología de Secuencia de Aminoácido
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 108(28): 11423-8, 2011 Jul 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21705660

RESUMEN

Myosin-binding protein C (MyBP-C) is a thick filament protein playing an essential role in muscle contraction, and MyBP-C mutations cause heart and skeletal muscle disease in millions worldwide. Despite its discovery 40 y ago, the mechanism of MyBP-C function remains unknown. In vitro studies suggest that MyBP-C could regulate contraction in a unique way--by bridging thick and thin filaments--but there has been no evidence for this in vivo. Here we use electron tomography of exceptionally well preserved muscle to demonstrate that MyBP-C does indeed bind to actin in intact muscle. This binding implies a physical mechanism for communicating the relative sliding between thick and thin filaments that does not involve myosin and which could modulate the contractile process.


Asunto(s)
Actinas/metabolismo , Proteínas Portadoras/metabolismo , Músculo Esquelético/metabolismo , Miosinas/metabolismo , Actinas/química , Actinas/ultraestructura , Animales , Fenómenos Biofísicos , Proteínas Portadoras/química , Proteínas Portadoras/ultraestructura , Tomografía con Microscopio Electrónico , Substitución por Congelación , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional , Modelos Moleculares , Músculo Esquelético/química , Músculo Esquelético/ultraestructura , Miosinas/química , Miosinas/ultraestructura , Ranidae
10.
Biophys J ; 105(9): 2114-22, 2013 Nov 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24209856

RESUMEN

Myosin filaments from many muscles are activated by phosphorylation of their regulatory light chains (RLCs). Structural analysis of relaxed tarantula thick filaments shows that the RLCs of the interacting free and blocked myosin heads are in different environments. This and other data suggested a phosphorylation mechanism in which Ser-35 of the free head is exposed and constitutively phosphorylated by protein kinase C, whereas the blocked head is hidden and unphosphorylated; on activation, myosin light chain kinase phosphorylates the monophosphorylated free head followed by the unphosphorylated blocked head, both at Ser-45. Our goal was to test this model of phosphorylation. Mass spectrometry of quickly frozen, intact muscles showed that only Ser-35 was phosphorylated in the relaxed state. The location of this constitutively phosphorylated Ser-35 was analyzed by immunofluorescence, using antibodies specific for unphosphorylated or phosphorylated Ser-35. In the relaxed state, myofibrils were labeled by anti-pSer-35 but not by anti-Ser-35, whereas in rigor, labeling was similar with both. This suggests that only pSer-35 is exposed in the relaxed state, while in rigor, Ser-35 is also exposed. In the interacting-head motif of relaxed filaments, only the free head RLCs are exposed, suggesting that the constitutive pSer-35 is on the free heads, consistent with the proposed mechanism.


Asunto(s)
Arácnidos , Proteínas de Artrópodos/química , Proteínas de Artrópodos/metabolismo , Miosinas/química , Miosinas/metabolismo , Actinas/metabolismo , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Proteínas de Artrópodos/aislamiento & purificación , Glicerol/química , Modelos Moleculares , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Quinasa de Cadena Ligera de Miosina/metabolismo , Miosinas/aislamiento & purificación , Fosforilación , Proteína Quinasa C/metabolismo , Serina/metabolismo , Urea/química
11.
J Gen Physiol ; 155(1)2023 01 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36346431

RESUMEN

Under relaxing conditions, the two heads of myosin II interact with each other and with the proximal part (S2) of the myosin tail, establishing the interacting-heads motif (IHM), found in myosin molecules and thick filaments of muscle and nonmuscle cells. The IHM is normally thought of as a single, unique structure, but there are several variants. In the simplest ("canonical") IHM, occurring in most relaxed thick filaments and in heavy meromyosin, the interacting heads bend back and interact with S2, and the motif lies parallel to the filament surface. In one variant, occurring in insect indirect flight muscle, there is no S2-head interaction and the motif is perpendicular to the filament. In a second variant, found in smooth and nonmuscle single myosin molecules in their inhibited (10S) conformation, S2 is shifted ∼20 Šfrom the canonical form and the tail folds twice and wraps around the interacting heads. These molecule and filament IHM variants have important energetic and pathophysiological consequences. (1) The canonical motif, with S2-head interaction, correlates with the super-relaxed (SRX) state of myosin. The absence of S2-head interaction in insects may account for the lower stability of this IHM and apparent absence of SRX in indirect flight muscle, contributing to the quick initiation of flight in insects. (2) The ∼20 Šshift of S2 in 10S myosin molecules means that S2-head interactions are different from those in the canonical IHM. This variant therefore cannot be used to analyze the impact of myosin mutations on S2-head interactions that occur in filaments, as has been proposed. It can be used, instead, to analyze the structural impact of mutations in smooth and nonmuscle myosin.


Asunto(s)
Músculos , Miosinas , Miosinas/genética , Miosinas/química
12.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Apr 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37090534

RESUMEN

Pumping of the heart is powered by filaments of the motor protein myosin, which pull on actin filaments to generate cardiac contraction. In addition to myosin, the filaments contain cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C), which modulates contractility in response to physiological stimuli, and titin, which functions as a scaffold for filament assembly 1 . Myosin, cMyBP-C and titin are all subject to mutation, which can lead to heart failure. Despite the central importance of cardiac myosin filaments to life, their molecular structure has remained a mystery for 60 years 2 . Here, we have solved the structure of the main (cMyBP-C-containing) region of the human cardiac filament to 6 Å resolution by cryo-EM. The reconstruction reveals the architecture of titin and cMyBP-C for the first time, and shows how myosin's motor domains (heads) form 3 different types of motif (providing functional flexibility), which interact with each other and with specific domains of titin and cMyBP-C to dictate filament architecture and regulate function. A novel packing of myosin tails in the filament backbone is also resolved. The structure suggests how cMyBP-C helps generate the cardiac super-relaxed state 3 , how titin and cMyBP-C may contribute to length-dependent activation 4 , and how mutations in myosin and cMyBP-C might disrupt interactions, causing disease 5, 6 . A similar structure is likely in vertebrate skeletal myosin filaments. The reconstruction resolves past uncertainties, and integrates previous data on cardiac muscle structure and function. It provides a new paradigm for interpreting structural, physiological and clinical observations, and for the design of potential therapeutic drugs.

13.
J Struct Biol ; 180(3): 469-78, 2012 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22982253

RESUMEN

Electron microscopy (EM) studies of 2D crystals of smooth muscle myosin molecules have shown that in the inactive state the two heads of a myosin molecule interact asymmetrically forming a myosin interacting-heads motif. This suggested that inactivation of the two heads occurs by blocking of the actin-binding site of one (free head) and the ATP hydrolysis site of the other (blocked head). This motif has been found by EM of isolated negatively stained myosin molecules of unregulated (vertebrate skeletal and cardiac muscle) and regulated (invertebrate striated and vertebrate smooth muscle) myosins, and nonmuscle myosin. The same motif has also been found in 3D-reconstructions of frozen-hydrated (tarantula, Limulus, scallop) and negatively stained (scallop, vertebrate cardiac) isolated thick filaments. We are carrying out studies of isolated thick filaments from other species to assess how general this myosin interacting-heads motif is. Here, using EM, we have visualized isolated, negatively stained thick filaments from scorpion striated muscle. We modified the iterative helical real space reconstruction (IHRSR) method to include filament tilt, and band-pass filtered the aligned segments before averaging, achieving a 3.3 nm resolution 3D-reconstruction. This reconstruction revealed the presence of the myosin interacting-heads motif (adding to evidence that is widely spread), together with 12 subfilaments in the filament backbone. This demonstrates that conventional negative staining and imaging can be used to detect the presence of the myosin interacting-heads motif in helically ordered thick filaments from different species and muscle types, thus avoiding the use of less accessible cryo-EM and low electron-dose procedures.


Asunto(s)
Citoesqueleto de Actina/química , Adenosina Trifosfato/química , Músculo Estriado/química , Miosinas/química , Escorpiones/química , Animales , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Microscopía Electrónica , Simulación del Acoplamiento Molecular , Imagen Molecular , Relajación Muscular , Dominios y Motivos de Interacción de Proteínas
14.
J Gen Physiol ; 154(1)2022 01 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34889960

RESUMEN

Super-relaxation is a state of muscle thick filaments in which ATP turnover by myosin is much slower than that of myosin II in solution. This inhibited state, in equilibrium with a faster (relaxed) state, is ubiquitous and thought to be fundamental to muscle function, acting as a mechanism for switching off energy-consuming myosin motors when they are not being used. The structural basis of super-relaxation is usually taken to be a motif formed by myosin in which the two heads interact with each other and with the proximal tail forming an interacting-heads motif, which switches the heads off. However, recent studies show that even isolated myosin heads can exhibit this slow rate. Here, we review the role of head interactions in creating the super-relaxed state and show how increased numbers of interactions in thick filaments underlie the high levels of super-relaxation found in intact muscle. We suggest how a third, even more inhibited, state of myosin (a hyper-relaxed state) seen in certain species results from additional interactions involving the heads. We speculate on the relationship between animal lifestyle and level of super-relaxation in different species and on the mechanism of formation of the super-relaxed state. We also review how super-relaxed thick filaments are activated and how the super-relaxed state is modulated in healthy and diseased muscles.


Asunto(s)
Miosina Tipo II , Miosinas , Animales , Músculos
15.
J Struct Biol ; 173(3): 445-50, 2011 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20854911

RESUMEN

The registration of volumetric structures in real space involves geometric and density transformations that align a target map and a probe map in the best way possible. Many computational docking strategies exist for finding the geometric transformations that superimpose maps, but the problem of finding an optimal density transformation, for the purposes of difference calculations or segmentation, has received little attention in the literature. We report results based on simulated and experimental electron microscopy maps, showing that a single scale factor (gain) may be insufficient when it comes to minimizing the density discrepancy between an aligned target and probe. We propose an affine transformation, with gain and bias, that is parameterized by known surface isovalues and by an interactive centering of the "cancellation peak" in the surface thresholded difference map histogram. The proposed approach minimizes discrepancies across a wide range of interior densities. Owing to having only two parameters, it avoids overfitting and requires only minimal knowledge of the probe and target maps. The linear transformation also preserves phases and relative amplitudes in Fourier space. The histogram matching strategy was implemented in the newly revised volhist tool of the Situs package, version 2.6.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Modelos Moleculares
16.
Nature ; 436(7054): 1195-9, 2005 Aug 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16121187

RESUMEN

Contraction of muscle involves the cyclic interaction of myosin heads on the thick filaments with actin subunits in the thin filaments. Muscles relax when this interaction is blocked by molecular switches on either or both filaments. Insight into the relaxed (switched OFF) structure of myosin has come from electron microscopic studies of smooth muscle myosin molecules, which are regulated by phosphorylation. These studies suggest that the OFF state is achieved by an asymmetric, intramolecular interaction between the actin-binding region of one head and the converter region of the other, switching both heads off. Although this is a plausible model for relaxation based on isolated myosin molecules, it does not reveal whether this structure is present in native myosin filaments. Here we analyse the structure of a phosphorylation-regulated striated muscle thick filament using cryo-electron microscopy. Three-dimensional reconstruction and atomic fitting studies suggest that the 'interacting-head' structure is also present in the filament, and that it may underlie the relaxed state of thick filaments in both smooth and myosin-regulated striated muscles over a wide range of species.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Moleculares , Músculo Esquelético/química , Músculo Esquelético/ultraestructura , Miosinas/metabolismo , Miosinas/ultraestructura , Animales , Microscopía por Crioelectrón , Músculo Liso/química , Músculo Liso/ultraestructura , Miosinas/química , Fosforilación , Estructura Cuaternaria de Proteína , Arañas
17.
J Gen Physiol ; 153(3)2021 03 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33480967

RESUMEN

Myosin molecules in the relaxed thick filaments of striated muscle have a helical arrangement in which the heads of each molecule interact with each other, forming the interacting-heads motif (IHM). In relaxed mammalian skeletal muscle, this helical ordering occurs only at temperatures >20°C and is disrupted when temperature is decreased. Recent x-ray diffraction studies of live tarantula skeletal muscle have suggested that the two myosin heads of the IHM (blocked heads [BHs] and free heads [FHs]) have very different roles and dynamics during contraction. Here, we explore temperature-induced changes in the BHs and FHs in relaxed tarantula skeletal muscle. We find a change with decreasing temperature that is similar to that in mammals, while increasing temperature induces a different behavior in the heads. At 22.5°C, the BHs and FHs containing ADP.Pi are fully helically organized, but they become progressively disordered as temperature is lowered or raised. Our interpretation suggests that at low temperature, while the BHs remain ordered the FHs become disordered due to transition of the heads to a straight conformation containing Mg.ATP. Above 27.5°C, the nucleotide remains as ADP.Pi, but while BHs remain ordered, half of the FHs become progressively disordered, released semipermanently at a midway distance to the thin filaments while the remaining FHs are docked as swaying heads. We propose a thermosensing mechanism for tarantula skeletal muscle to explain these changes. Our results suggest that tarantula skeletal muscle thick filaments, in addition to having a superrelaxation-based ATP energy-saving mechanism in the range of 8.5-40°C, also exhibit energy saving at lower temperatures (<22.5°C), similar to the proposed refractory state in mammals.


Asunto(s)
Artrópodos , Miosinas , Citoesqueleto de Actina , Adenosina Trifosfato , Animales , Músculo Esquelético
18.
Biophys J ; 95(7): 3322-9, 2008 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18599626

RESUMEN

Blebbistatin is a small-molecule, high-affinity, noncompetitive inhibitor of myosin II. We have used negative staining electron microscopy to study the effects of blebbistatin on the organization of the myosin heads on muscle thick filaments. Loss of ADP and Pi from the heads causes thick filaments to lose their helical ordering. In the presence of 100 microM blebbistatin, disordering was at least 10 times slower. In the M.ADP state, myosin heads are also disordered. When blebbistatin was added to M.ADP thick filaments, helical ordering was restored. However, blebbistatin did not improve the order of thick filaments lacking bound nucleotide. Addition of calcium to relaxed muscle homogenates induced thick-thin filament interaction and filament sliding. In the presence of blebbistatin, filament interaction was inhibited. These structural observations support the conclusion, based on biochemical studies, that blebbistatin inhibits myosin ATPase and actin interaction by stabilizing the closed switch 2 structure of the myosin head. These properties make blebbistatin a useful tool in structural and functional studies of cell motility and muscle contraction.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos Heterocíclicos de 4 o más Anillos/farmacología , Miosinas/química , Actinas/metabolismo , Adenosina Difosfato/metabolismo , Animales , Apirasa/metabolismo , Arácnidos/citología , Arácnidos/metabolismo , Músculos/efectos de los fármacos , Músculos/metabolismo , Miosinas/metabolismo , Fosfatos/metabolismo , Unión Proteica/efectos de los fármacos
19.
Biophys Rev ; 10(5): 1465-1477, 2018 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28871552

RESUMEN

Tarantula's leg muscle thick filament is the ideal model for the study of the structure and function of skeletal muscle thick filaments. Its analysis has given rise to a series of structural and functional studies, leading, among other things, to the discovery of the myosin interacting-heads motif (IHM). Further electron microscopy (EM) studies have shown the presence of IHM in frozen-hydrated and negatively stained thick filaments of striated, cardiac, and smooth muscle of bilaterians, most showing the IHM parallel to the filament axis. EM studies on negatively stained heavy meromyosin of different species have shown the presence of IHM on sponges, animals that lack muscle, extending the presence of IHM to metazoans. The IHM evolved about 800 MY ago in the ancestor of Metazoa, and independently with functional differences in the lineage leading to the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum (Mycetozoa). This motif conveys important functional advantages, such as Ca2+ regulation and ATP energy-saving mechanisms. Recent interest has focused on human IHM structure in order to understand the structural basis underlying various conditions and situations of scientific and medical interest: the hypertrophic and dilated cardiomyopathies, overfeeding control, aging and hormone deprival muscle weakness, drug design for schistosomiasis control, and conditioning exercise physiology for the training of power athletes.

20.
Biophys Rev ; 9(5): 461-480, 2017 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28871556

RESUMEN

The tarantula skeletal muscle X-ray diffraction pattern suggested that the myosin heads were helically arranged on the thick filaments. Electron microscopy (EM) of negatively stained relaxed tarantula thick filaments revealed four helices of heads allowing a helical 3D reconstruction. Due to its low resolution (5.0 nm), the unambiguous interpretation of densities of both heads was not possible. A resolution increase up to 2.5 nm, achieved by cryo-EM of frozen-hydrated relaxed thick filaments and an iterative helical real space reconstruction, allowed the resolving of both heads. The two heads, "free" and "blocked", formed an asymmetric structure named the "interacting-heads motif" (IHM) which explained relaxation by self-inhibition of both heads ATPases. This finding made tarantula an exemplar system for thick filament structure and function studies. Heads were shown to be released and disordered by Ca2+-activation through myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation, leading to EM, small angle X-ray diffraction and scattering, and spectroscopic and biochemical studies of the IHM structure and function. The results from these studies have consequent implications for understanding and explaining myosin super-relaxed state and thick filament activation and regulation. A cooperative phosphorylation mechanism for activation in tarantula skeletal muscle, involving swaying constitutively Ser35 mono-phosphorylated free heads, explains super-relaxation, force potentiation and post-tetanic potentiation through Ser45 mono-phosphorylated blocked heads. Based on this mechanism, we propose a swaying-swinging, tilting crossbridge-sliding filament for tarantula muscle contraction.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA