Expression of cTnT(trunc) in mouse myocardium enhanced thin filament activation, increasing Ca(2+)-activated force and the rate of cross-bridge attachment at submaximal Ca(2+) concentrations.
Expression of cTnT with a COOH-terminal truncation enhances thin filament activation and accelerates cross-bridge attachment at submaximal calcium concentrations, which may account for slowed myocardial relaxation during early diastole.
Transgenic mice expressing an allele of cardiac troponin T (cTnT) with a COOH-terminal truncation (cTnT(trunc)) exhibit severe diastolic and mild systolic dysfunction. We tested the hypothesis that contractile dysfunction in myocardium expressing low levels of cTnT(trunc) (i.e., <5%) is due to slowed cross-bridge kinetics and reduced thin filament activation as a consequence of reduced cross-bridge binding. We measured the Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development pCa for half-maximal tension generation (pCa(50)) and the rate constant of force redevelopment (k(tr)) in cTnT(trunc) and wild-type (WT) skinned myocardium both in the absence and in the presence of a strong-binding, non-force-generating derivative of myosin subfragment-1 (NEM-S1). Compared with WT mice, cTnT(trunc) mice exhibited greater pCa(50), reduced steepness of the force-pCa relationship Hill coefficient (n(H)), and faster k(tr) at submaximal Ca(2+) concentration (Ca(2+)), i.e., reduced activation dependence of k(tr). Treatment with NEM-S1 elicited similar increases in pCa(50) and similar reductions in n(H) in WT and cTnT(trunc) myocardium but elicited greater increases in k(tr) at submaximal activation in cTnT(trunc) myocardium. Contrary to our initial hypothesis, cTnT(trunc) appears to enhance thin filament activation in myocardium, which is manifested as significant increases in Ca(2+)-activated force and the rate of cross-bridge attachment at submaximal Ca(2+). Although these mechanisms would not be expected to depress systolic function per se in cTnT(trunc) hearts, they would account for slowed rates of myocardial relaxation during early diastole.
Stelzer et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Diastolic and mild systolic dysfunction. Expression of cTnT(trunc) vs. Wild-type (WT) myocardium was evaluated on Ca(2+) sensitivity of force development and rate constant of force redevelopment. Expression of cTnT(trunc) in mouse myocardium enhanced thin filament activation, increasing Ca(2+)-activated force and the rate of cross-bridge attachment at submaximal Ca(2+) concentrations.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: