butanedione monoxime
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2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 822-828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Bajelan ◽  
Mohammad Saleh Bahreini ◽  
Qasem Asgari ◽  
Fattaneh Mikaeili

Medicina ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 249
Author(s):  
Hans Degens ◽  
David A. Jones

Background and Objectives: Muscle fatigue is characterised by (1) loss of force, (2) decreased maximal shortening velocity and (3) a greater resistance to stretch that could be due to reduced intracellular Ca2+ and increased Pi, which alter cross bridge kinetics. Materials and Methods: To investigate this, we used (1) 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM), believed to increase the proportion of attached but non-force-generating cross bridges; (2) Pi that increases the proportion of attached cross bridges, but with Pi still attached; and (3) reduced activating Ca2+. We used permeabilised rat soleus fibres, activated with pCa 4.5 at 15 °C. Results: The addition of 1 mM BDM or 15 mM Pi, or the lowering of the Ca2+ to pCa 5.5, all reduced the isometric force by around 50%. Stiffness decreased in proportion to isometric force when the fibres were activated at pCa 5.5, but was well maintained in the presence of Pi and BDM. Force enhancement after a stretch increased with the length of stretch and Pi, suggesting a role for titin. Maximum shortening velocity was reduced by about 50% in the presence of BDM and pCa 5.5, but was slightly increased by Pi. Neither decreasing Ca2+ nor increasing Pi alone mimicked the effects of fatigue on muscle contractile characteristics entirely. Only BDM elicited a decrease of force and slowing with maintained stiffness, similar to the situation in fatigued muscle. Conclusions: This suggests that in fatigue, there is an accumulation of attached but low-force cross bridges that cannot be the result of the combined action of reduced Ca2+ or increased Pi alone, but is probably due to a combination of factors that change during fatigue.


2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
pp. 997-1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Somaye Shahraki ◽  
Ali Heydari ◽  
Hojat Samareh Delarami ◽  
Alireza Oveisi Keikha ◽  
Zahra Azizi ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (7) ◽  
pp. 2091 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felicity Eakins ◽  
Jeffrey J. Harford ◽  
Carlo Knupp ◽  
Manfred Roessle ◽  
John M. Squire

At a resting sarcomere length of approximately 2.2 µm bony fish muscles put into rigor in the presence of BDM (2,3-butanedione monoxime) to reduce rigor tension generation show the normal arrangement of myosin head interactions with actin filaments as monitored by low-angle X-ray diffraction. However, if the muscles are put into rigor using the same protocol but stretched to 2.5 µm sarcomere length, a markedly different structure is observed. The X-ray diffraction pattern is not just a weaker version of the pattern at full overlap, as might be expected, but it is quite different. It is compatible with the actin-attached myosin heads being in a different conformation on actin, with the average centre of cross-bridge mass at a higher radius than in normal rigor and the myosin lever arms conforming less to the actin filament geometry, probably pointing back to their origins on their parent myosin filaments. The possible nature of this new rigor cross-bridge conformation is discussed in terms of other well-known states such as the weak binding state and the ‘roll and lock’ mechanism; we speculate that we may have trapped most myosin heads in an early attached strong actin-binding state in the cross-bridge cycle on actin.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 1053-1058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Byung Kook Lee ◽  
Mu Jin Kim ◽  
Kyung Woon Jeung ◽  
Sung Soo Choi ◽  
Sang Wook Park ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 310 (8) ◽  
pp. C692-C700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maki Yamaguchi ◽  
Masako Kimura ◽  
Zhao-bo Li ◽  
Tetsuo Ohno ◽  
Shigeru Takemori ◽  
...  

The phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) is an important modulator of skeletal muscle performance and plays a key role in posttetanic potentiation and staircase potentiation of twitch contractions. The structural basis for these phenomena within the filament lattice has not been thoroughly investigated. Using a synchrotron radiation source at SPring8, we obtained X-ray diffraction patterns from skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers before and after phosphorylation of myosin RLC in the presence of myosin light chain kinase, calmodulin, and calcium at a concentration below the threshold for tension development ([Ca2+] = 10−6.8 M). After phosphorylation, the first myosin layer line slightly decreased in intensity at ∼0.05 nm−1 along the equatorial axis, indicating a partial loss of the helical order of myosin heads along the thick filament. Concomitantly, the (1,1/1,0) intensity ratio of the equatorial reflections increased. These results provide a firm structural basis for the hypothesis that phosphorylation of myosin RLC caused the myosin heads to move away from the thick filaments towards the thin filaments, thereby enhancing the probability of interaction with actin. In contrast, 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM), known to inhibit contraction by impeding phosphate release from myosin, had exactly the opposite effects on meridional and equatorial reflections to those of phosphorylation. We hypothesize that these antagonistic effects are due to the acceleration of phosphate release from myosin by phosphorylation and its inhibition by BDM, the consequent shifts in crossbridge equilibria leading to opposite changes in abundance of the myosin-ADP-inorganic phosphate complex state associated with helical order of thick filaments.


Resuscitation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 82
Author(s):  
Byung Kook Lee ◽  
Kyung Woon Jeung ◽  
Sung Min Lee ◽  
Kyoung Hwan Song ◽  
Sung Soo Choi

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