scholarly journals Cardiomyopathy Mutations in the Tail of β-Cardiac Myosin Modify the Coiled-coil Structure and Affect Integration into Thick Filaments in Muscle Sarcomeres in Adult Cardiomyocytes

2013 ◽  
Vol 288 (44) ◽  
pp. 31952-31962 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Wolny ◽  
Melanie Colegrave ◽  
Lucy Colman ◽  
Ed White ◽  
Peter J. Knight ◽  
...  
1999 ◽  
Vol 147 (5) ◽  
pp. 1039-1048 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenchuan Liang ◽  
Hans M. Warrick ◽  
James A. Spudich

Myosin II thick filament assembly in Dictyostelium is regulated by phosphorylation at three threonines in the tail region of the molecule. Converting these three threonines to aspartates (3×Asp myosin II), which mimics the phosphorylated state, inhibits filament assembly in vitro, and 3×Asp myosin II fails to rescue myosin II–null phenotypes. Here we report a suppressor screen of Dictyostelium myosin II–null cells containing 3×Asp myosin II, which reveals a 21-kD region in the tail that is critical for the phosphorylation control. These data, combined with new structural evidence from electron microscopy and sequence analyses, provide evidence that thick filament assembly control involves the folding of myosin II into a bent monomer, which is unable to incorporate into thick filaments. The data are consistent with a structural model for the bent monomer in which two specific regions of the tail interact to form an antiparallel tetrameric coiled–coil structure.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (22) ◽  
pp. 6980
Author(s):  
Balaganesh Kuruba ◽  
Marta Kaczmarek ◽  
Małgorzata Kęsik-Brodacka ◽  
Magdalena Fojutowska ◽  
Małgorzata Śliwinska ◽  
...  

Tropomyosin (Tpm) is an actin-binding coiled-coil protein. In muscle, it regulates contractions in a troponin/Ca2+-dependent manner and controls the thin filament lengths at the pointed end. Due to its size and periodic structure, it is difficult to observe small local structural changes in the coiled coil caused by disease-related mutations. In this study, we designed 97-residue peptides, Tpm1.164–154 and Tpm3.1265–155, focusing on the actin-binding period 3 of two muscle isoforms. Using these peptides, we evaluated the effects of cardiomyopathy mutations: I92T and V95A in Tpm1.1, and congenital myopathy mutations R91P and R91C in Tpm3.12. We introduced a cysteine at the N-terminus of each fragment to promote the formation of the coiled-coil structure by disulfide bonds. Dimerization of the designed peptides was confirmed by gel electrophoresis in the presence and absence of dithiothreitol. Using circular dichroism, we showed that all mutations decreased coiled coil stability, with Tpm3.1265–155R91P and Tpm1.164–154I92T having the most drastic effects. Our experiments also indicated that adding the N-terminal cysteine increased coiled coil stability demonstrating that our design can serve as an effective tool in studying the coiled-coil fragments of various proteins.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (14) ◽  
pp. e2024151118
Author(s):  
Hamidreza Rahmani ◽  
Wen Ma ◽  
Zhongjun Hu ◽  
Nadia Daneshparvar ◽  
Dianne W. Taylor ◽  
...  

The atomic structure of the complete myosin tail within thick filaments isolated from Lethocerus indicus flight muscle is described and compared to crystal structures of recombinant, human cardiac myosin tail segments. Overall, the agreement is good with three exceptions: the proximal S2, in which the filament has heads attached but the crystal structure doesn’t, and skip regions 2 and 4. At the head–tail junction, the tail α-helices are asymmetrically structured encompassing well-defined unfolding of 12 residues for one myosin tail, ∼4 residues of the other, and different degrees of α-helix unwinding for both tail α-helices, thereby providing an atomic resolution description of coiled-coil “uncoiling” at the head–tail junction. Asymmetry is observed in the nonhelical C termini; one C-terminal segment is intercalated between ribbons of myosin tails, the other apparently terminating at Skip 4 of another myosin tail. Between skip residues, crystal and filament structures agree well. Skips 1 and 3 also agree well and show the expected α-helix unwinding and coiled-coil untwisting in response to skip residue insertion. Skips 2 and 4 are different. Skip 2 is accommodated in an unusual manner through an increase in α-helix radius and corresponding reduction in rise/residue. Skip 4 remains helical in one chain, with the other chain unfolded, apparently influenced by the acidic myosin C terminus. The atomic model may shed some light on thick filament mechanosensing and is a step in understanding the complex roles that thick filaments of all species undergo during muscle contraction.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (8) ◽  
pp. E1355-E1364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. Kensler ◽  
Roger Craig ◽  
Richard L. Moss

Cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C) has a key regulatory role in cardiac contraction, but the mechanism by which changes in phosphorylation of cMyBP-C accelerate cross-bridge kinetics remains unknown. In this study, we isolated thick filaments from the hearts of mice in which the three serine residues (Ser273, Ser282, and Ser302) that are phosphorylated by protein kinase A in the m-domain of cMyBP-C were replaced by either alanine or aspartic acid, mimicking the fully nonphosphorylated and the fully phosphorylated state of cMyBP-C, respectively. We found that thick filaments from the cMyBP-C phospho-deficient hearts had highly ordered cross-bridge arrays, whereas the filaments from the cMyBP-C phospho-mimetic hearts showed a strong tendency toward disorder. Our results support the hypothesis that dephosphorylation of cMyBP-C promotes or stabilizes the relaxed/superrelaxed quasi-helical ordering of the myosin heads on the filament surface, whereas phosphorylation weakens this stabilization and binding of the heads to the backbone. Such structural changes would modulate the probability of myosin binding to actin and could help explain the acceleration of cross-bridge interactions with actin when cMyBP-C is phosphorylated because of, for example, activation of β1-adrenergic receptors in myocardium.


1999 ◽  
Vol 112 (24) ◽  
pp. 4687-4694 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Dilbeck ◽  
M. Berberof ◽  
A. Van Cauwenberge ◽  
H. Alexandre ◽  
E. Pays

TBBC (for Trypanosoma brucei basal body component) is a unique gene transcribed in a 4.8 kb mRNA encoding a 1,410 amino acid protein that consists almost entirely of a coiled coil structure. This protein appeared to localize in the basal body, with an accessory presence at the posterior end of the cell, the nucleus and over the flagellum. Since the two other known components of the trypanosome basal body are (gamma)-tubulin and an uncharacterized component termed BBA4 we performed double immunofluorescence experiments with anti-TBBC and either anti-BBA4 or anti-(gamma)-tubulin antibodies. These three components did not colocalize but were very closely associated, BBA4 being the most proximal to the kinetoplast DNA. Anti-TBBC antibodies detected a 170 kDa protein in western blots of total HeLa cell extracts. Moreover, these antibodies stained the centriole of HeLa and COS cells as well as the centriole of mouse spermatozoa, indicating that a TBBC-like centriolar component has been conserved during the evolution of eukaryotes.


1986 ◽  
Vol 163 (1) ◽  
pp. 129-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
B N Manjula ◽  
A S Acharya ◽  
T Fairwell ◽  
V A Fischetti

Pep M5, the pepsin-derived N-terminal half of the group A streptococcal type 5 M protein exhibits immunologic crossreaction with type 6 M protein, localizing some of the M6-crossreactive epitope(s) within this segment of the M5 protein. Based on the amino acid sequence of the Pep M5 protein, two structurally distinct domains have been recognized within its coiled-coil structure. We have now found that peptides derived from both the structurally distinct domains of the Pep M5 protein contain antigenic epitopes. Furthermore, only the peptides from the C-terminal domain of the Pep M5 protein crossreacted with rabbit anti-M6 sera, whereas those from the N-terminal domain did not. Consistent with this, sequence analyses of the arginyl peptides of the Pep M6 protein, the pepsin-derived N-terminal half of the M6 protein, revealed extensive homology of some of these peptides with regions within the C-terminal domain of the Pep M5 molecule. While an arginyl peptide of the Pep M6 protein exhibits 84% homology with region 150-186 of the Pep M5 protein, the C-terminal hexadecapeptide of the Pep M6 protein is virtually identical with the corresponding region of the Pep M5 protein. These results are suggestive of conformational similarities in the region around the pepsin-susceptible site within the M5 and M6 proteins. In addition, one or more epitopes of the M5 protein that are crossreactive with the M6 protein may be placed close to the pepsin-susceptible site of the M5 protein. Previous studies have suggested the N-terminal half of the M proteins to be the variable part of the molecule among the different M protein serotypes. The present results suggest that the N-terminal quarter of the M protein may represent the hypervariable domain of the M molecule.


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