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Allosteric modulation of cardiac myosin mechanics and kinetics by the conjugated omega-7,9 trans-fat rumenic acid
- Source :
- The Journal of physiologyReferences. 599(15)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Key points Direct binding of rumenic acid to the cardiac myosin-2 motor domain increases the release rate for orthophosphate and increases the Ca2+ responsiveness of cardiac muscle at low load. Physiological cellular concentrations of rumenic acid affect the ATP turnover rates of the super-relaxed and disordered relaxed states of β-cardiac myosin, leading to a net increase in myocardial metabolic load. In Ca2+ -activated trabeculae, rumenic acid exerts a direct inhibitory effect on the force-generating mechanism without affecting the number of force-generating motors. In the presence of saturating actin concentrations rumenic acid binds to the β-cardiac myosin-2 motor domain with an EC50 of 200 nM. Molecular docking studies provide information about the binding site, the mode of binding, and associated allosteric communication pathways. Free rumenic acid may exceed thresholds in cardiomyocytes above which contractile efficiency is reduced and interference with small molecule therapeutics, targeting cardiac myosin, occurs. Abstract Based on experiments using purified myosin motor domains, reconstituted actomyosin complexes and rat heart ventricular trabeculae, we demonstrate direct binding of rumenic acid, the cis-delta-9-trans-delta-11 isomer of conjugated linoleic acid, to an allosteric site located in motor domain of mammalian cardiac myosin-2 isoforms. In the case of porcine β-cardiac myosin, the EC50 for rumenic acid varies from 10.5 μM in the absence of actin to 200 nM in the presence of saturating concentrations of actin. Saturating concentrations of rumenic acid increase the maximum turnover of basal and actin-activated ATPase activity of β-cardiac myosin approximately 2-fold but decrease the force output per motor by 23% during isometric contraction. The increase in ATP turnover is linked to an acceleration of the release of the hydrolysis product orthophosphate. In the presence of 5 μM rumenic acid, the difference in the rate of ATP turnover by the super-relaxed and disordered relaxed states of cardiac myosin increases from 4-fold to 20-fold. The equilibrium between the two functional myosin states is not affected by rumenic acid. Calcium responsiveness is increased under zero-load conditions but unchanged under load. Molecular docking studies provide information about the rumenic acid binding site, the mode of binding, and associated allosteric communication pathways. They show how the isoform-specific replacement of residues in the binding cleft induces a different mode of rumenic acid binding in the case of non-muscle myosin-2C and blocks binding to skeletal muscle and smooth muscle myosin-2 isoforms.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
animal structures
Physiology
Swine
Conjugated linoleic acid
Allosteric regulation
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
Adenosine Triphosphate
Myosin
medicine
Animals
Linoleic Acids, Conjugated
Binding site
Actin
Chemistry
Rumenic acid
Cardiac muscle
Skeletal muscle
Actins
Rats
Molecular Docking Simulation
Kinetics
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Biophysics
Cardiac Myosins
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14697793
- Volume :
- 599
- Issue :
- 15
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of physiologyReferences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....047322f04139eeec1b0b72d7fbbe8743