| Literature DB >> 29081749 |
Divya Duggal1, S Requena1, Janhavi Nagwekar1, Sangram Raut2, Ryan Rich3, Hriday Das4, Vipul Patel1,5, Ignacy Gryczynski1, Rafal Fudala1, Zygmunt Gryczynski2, Cheavar Blair6, Kenneth S Campbell6, Julian Borejdo1.
Abstract
The systemic circulation offers larger resistance to the blood flow than the pulmonary system. Consequently, the left ventricle (LV) must pump blood with more force than the right ventricle (RV). The question arises whether the stronger pumping action of the LV is due to a more efficient action of left ventricular myosin, or whether it is due to the morphological differences between ventricles. Such a question cannot be answered by studying the entire ventricles or myocytes because any observed differences would be wiped out by averaging the information obtained from trillions of myosin molecules present in a ventricle or myocyte. We therefore searched for the differences between single myosin molecules of the LV and RV of failing hearts In-situ. We show that the parameters that define the mechanical characteristics of working myosin (kinetic rates and the distribution of spatial orientation of myosin lever arm) were the same in both ventricles. These results suggest that there is no difference in the way myosin interacts with thin filaments in myocytes of failing hearts, and suggests that the difference in pumping efficiencies are caused by interactions between muscle proteins other than myosin or that they are purely morphological.Entities:
Keywords: cross-bridge orientation; fluorescence polarization; heart ventricles
Year: 2017 PMID: 29081749 PMCID: PMC5645524 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.00732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Changes of conformation of a cross-bridge during the contractile cycle are reflected by changes of anisotropy of the myosin lever arm (red line). The kinetics of orientation changes of a lever arm is a characteristic property of muscle. The instrument used to measure anisotropy is shown in Figure S1. Fluorescent LC sits on a lever arm of a cross-bridge (red rectangle). LC orientation is indicated by the magenta arrow; (A) XB is originally free of actin. Lower and upper 50 KDa domains of myosin XB (gray and blue, respectively) are separated. The lever arm is facing down. Steady State Fluorescence Anisotropy (SSFA) of the lever arm is low. (B) The anisotropy of LC+LV (rigor) complex (apo form of ventricular XB is bound to actin filament). Lower and upper 50 KDa domains of XB are closed. The anisotropy assumes intermediate value (SSFA = 0.135); (C) Interaction between XB containing ADP and actin. Lower and upper 50 KDa domains of XB are closed the anisotropy of a complex assumes the highest value (SSFA = 0.201). This is consistent with recent report (Wulf et al., 2016). The lower plot in each anisotropy graph is a residual. X2 indicates goodness of non-linear fit to a thin black line. 0.1 mg/ml myocytes from the left ventricle, 2 mM MgADP, 5 mM MgATP. Excitation at 630 nm by Fianium supercontinuum white light source. The emission was observed at 665 nm through long pass 650 nm filter by a fast microchannel photomultiplier tube.
Figure 2(A) A diffraction limited laser beam (green ellipsoid) is focused on an isolated myocyte sitting on a coverslip. A confocal microscope sees only the Observational Volume (OV, outlined by a broken line). The A-band (red) is the only region where the interaction between actin and myosin occurs. (B) Fluorescence is collected from the OV shown here in 3D as a green sphere imbedded in the A-band. It is projection of the confocal aperture on the image plane. The diameter of the OV (0.5 μm) is equal to the diameter of the confocal pinhole (50 μm) divided by the magnification of the objective (100x). Myosin within the A-band is fluorescently labeled (red). The I-bands are non-fluorescent (blue). Thick black lines are the H-zones; thin black lines are the Z-bands. The myocyte contracts (i.e., develops normal force), but does not shorten because it is cross-linked (see Methods); (C) One in approximately one thousand myosin molecules within the thick filament is labeled at LC Cys 174 and Cys 181. The transition dipole moments the dye of two labeled myosins are marked in magenta. Emission dipoles of the dye attached to these two cysteines point in the same direction. Labeling of only 1 in a 1,000 myosins ensures that there are only 6 myosin molecules in the OV (see Methods). Actin monomers (yellow) are non-fluorescent. (D) Fluorescent lifetime image of a myocyte from a non-failing human RV in rigor myocytes were imaged by fluorescent lifetime imaging because a lifetime image is of better quality than a confocal image. Nevertheless, the quality of the image is poor because of intentionally inefficient labeling (see Methods). On the average only ~6 myosin molecules/half-sarcomere were labeled with the fluorophore (see Methods). The color bar indicates lifetime (in nanoseconds) of a given pixel. The non-fluorescent part (H-zone) is pointed to by the blue arrow. Data was collected from the red spot (pointed to by the yellow arrow). The data was collected only from the part of a myocyte which was aligned vertically (thus it was not collected from the A-band pointed to by the red arrow). The scale bar is 5 μm. The red dot (pointed by the yellow arrow) is the 2D projection of the OV. The image has not been contrast enhanced.
Figure 3The time course of intensities of fluorescent light from myosin. Fluorescent intensities are polarized parallel (red) and perpendicular (black) with respect to the axis of the myocyte. Polarization of fluorescence is shown in blue. The average polarization of fluorescence was 0.400 ± 0.158. The signal from the OV of a left ventricle in the presence of MgADP.
Figure 4Conformational transitions of 6 XBs during contraction of a ventricle. Red line indicates change of anisotropy. (A) Binding of cross-bridges to a thin filament of a ventricle is characterized by the rate constant kB; (B) transition from apoenzyme to holoenzyme form of myosin is characterized by the rate constant kADP; (C) dissociation of a cross-bridge from a thin filament characterized by the rate constant kDISS.
Figure 5A typical autocorrelation function of the lever arm fluctuations of contracting cardiac myosin in HF RV. Filled circles are the data. Red line is non-linear fit to analytical solution described in Mettikolla et al. (2011).
Differences between the kinetic rate constants of LV and RV of heart failure ventricles.
| HF LV | 1.69 ± 0.05 | 2.24 ± 0.06 |
| HF RV | 1.72 ± 0.04 | 2.36 ± 0.20 |
The results are averages of 27 experiments on LVs and 26 experiments on RVs. Errors are SD. Overall, the differences in the values of HF LV and RV were not significant.
Figure 6Spatial distribution of lever arm angles of cross-bridges of contracting HF ventricles. The orientation of ~6 cross-bridges in 27 different preparations of LV and 26 preparations of RV Data shows no difference in FWHM. Bars are data. Red line is the best fit.
The FWHM of distribution of lever arm angles of cross-bridges in the A-band of contracting LVs and RVs myocytes from HF human heart.
| HF LV | 0.390 ± 0.03 | 0.853 ± 0.096 |
| HF RV | 0.381 ± 0.01 | 0.889 ± 0.078 |
The results are averages of 27 experiments on LVs and 26 experiments on RVs. Errors are SD. By conventional criteria, the statistical significance of difference of FWHM was not statistically significant (t = 0.691, P = 0.505) within 10 degrees of freedom. AR.