HCM-causing cardiac TnT mutations decreased calcium sensitivity of force production, and missense mutations increased unloaded shortening velocity nearly 2-fold in a myotube expression system.
Effect estimate: nearly 2-fold increase in unloaded shortening velocity
Mutations in a number of cardiac sarcomeric protein genes cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Previous findings indicate that HCM-causing mutations associated with a truncated cardiac troponin T (TnT) and missense mutations in the beta-myosin heavy chain share abnormalities in common, acting as dominant negative alleles that impair contractile performance. In contrast, Lin et al. Lin, D., Bobkova, A., Homsher, E. & Tobacman, L. S. (1996) J. Clin. Invest. 97, 2842-2848 characterized a TnT point mutation (Ile79Asn) and concluded that it might lead to hypercontractility and, thus, potentially a different mechanism for HCM pathogenesis. In this study, three HCM-causing cardiac TnT mutations (Ile79Asn, Arg92Gln, and DeltaGlu160) were studied in a myotube expression system. Functional studies of wild-type and mutant transfected myotubes revealed that all three mutants decreased the calcium sensitivity of force production and that the two missense mutations (Ile79Asn and Arg92Gln) increased the unloaded shortening velocity nearly 2-fold. The data demonstrate that TnT can alter the rate of myosin cross-bridge detachment, and thus the troponin complex plays a greater role in modulating muscle contractile performance than was recognized previously. Furthermore, these data suggest that these TnT mutations may cause disease via an increased energetic load on the heart. This would represent a second paradigm for HCM pathogenesis.
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
University of Oxford
University of Pennsylvania
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Sweeney et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Cardiac TnT mutations (Ile79Asn, Arg92Gln, and DeltaGlu160) vs. Wild-type transfected myotubes was evaluated on Calcium sensitivity of force production and unloaded shortening velocity (nearly 2-fold increase in unloaded shortening velocity). HCM-causing cardiac TnT mutations decreased calcium sensitivity of force production, and missense mutations increased unloaded shortening velocity nearly 2-fold in a myotube expression system.