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Chronic congestive heart failure has been produced in dogs by surgical induction of valvular disease. Cardiac myosin was isolated from the normal dogs and from dogs with congestive heart failure and characterized. Physicochemical properties of the cardiac myosins were determined by measurements of velocity sedimentation, partial specific volume, rate of diffusion, limiting viscosity number, light-scattering behavior, and ATPase activity. The measurements show that normal cardiac myosin (myosin C) has a molecular weight of 225,000, whereas myosin from the failing heart (myosin F) has a molecular weight of 690,000. This change in molecular weight occurs without a marked alteration in amino acid composition and suggests that end-to-end trimerization of normal cardiac myosin occurs in association with congestive heart failure in the dog. There was no significant change in ATPase activity.
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Ludwig W. Eichna
State University of New York
Robert E. Olson
Medtronic (United States)
Eric Ellenbogen
University of Pittsburgh
Circulation
University of Pittsburgh
May Institute
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Eichna et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a154134a2352da3478223aa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.24.2.471