Literature DB >> 29582353

Development of apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with age in a transgenic mouse model carrying the cardiac actin E99K mutation.

Li Wang1,2, Fan Bai2, Qing Zhang1, Weihua Song3, Andrew Messer3, Masataka Kawai4.   

Abstract

In both humans and mice, the Glu-99-Lys (E99K) mutation in the cardiac actin gene (ACTC) results in little understood apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (AHCM). To determine how cross-bridge kinetics change with AHCM development, we applied sinusoidal length perturbations to skinned papillary muscle fibres from 2- and 5-month old E99K transgenic (Tg) and non-transgenic (NTg) mice, and studied tension and its transients. These age groups were chosen because our preliminary studies indicated that AHCM develops with age. Fibres from 5-month old E99K mice showed significant decreases in tension, stiffness, the rate of the medium-speed exponential process and its magnitude compared to non-transgenic control. The nucleotide association constants increased with age, and they were significantly larger in E99K compared to NTg. However, there were no large differences in the rates of the cross-bridge detachment step, the rates of the force generation step, or the phosphate association constant. Our result on force/cross-bridge demonstrates that the decreased active tension of E99K fibres was caused by a decreased amount of force generated per each cross-bridge. The effects were generally less or insignificant at 2 months. A pCa-tension study showed increased Ca2+-sensitivity (pCa50) with age in both the E99K and NTg sample groups, and pCa50 was significantly larger (but only for 0.05-0.06 pCa units) in E99K than in NTg groups. A significant decrease in cooperativity (nH) was observed only in 5-month old E99K mice. We conclude that the AHCM-causing ACTC E99K mutation is associated with progressive alterations in biomechanical parameters, with changes smaller at 2 months but larger at 5 months, correlating with the development of AHCM.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ca ion sensitivity; Nucleotide association; Pathogenic mechanisms; Rate constant; Rigor state; Sinusoidal analysis; Stiffness; Tension transient

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29582353      PMCID: PMC6003854          DOI: 10.1007/s10974-018-9492-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Muscle Res Cell Motil        ISSN: 0142-4319            Impact factor:   2.698


  58 in total

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10.  Age- and strain-related aberrant Ca2+ release is associated with sudden cardiac death in the ACTC E99K mouse model of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

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