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Insights into the kinetics of Ca2+-regulated contraction and relaxation from myofibril studies

Journal

PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 458, Issue 2, Pages 337-357

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00424-008-0630-2

Keywords

Muscle contraction; Muscle relaxation; Myocardial contraction; Myocardial relaxation; Myofibrils; Sarcomeres; Calcium; Thin-filament regulation; Cross-bridge kinetics; Relaxation; Cross-bridge; Muscle mechanics; Cardiac sarcomere; Cardiac muscle; Cardiac function; Caged calcium; Calcium regulation; Skinned fibre

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [DFG SFB-612/A2]
  2. Centre of Molecular Medicine Cologne [A6]
  3. Faculty of Medicine Cologne [Koln-Fortune 6/2008]
  4. Telethon Italy [GGP07133]
  5. MiUR [PRIN 2006]
  6. Ente Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze

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Muscle contraction results from force-generating interactions between myosin cross-bridges on the thick filament and actin on the thin filament. The force-generating interactions are regulated by Ca2+ via specialised proteins of the thin filament. It is controversial how the contractile and regulatory systems dynamically interact to determine the time course of muscle contraction and relaxation. Whereas kinetics of Ca2+-induced thin-filament regulation is often investigated with isolated proteins, force kinetics is usually studied in muscle fibres. The gap between studies on isolated proteins and structured fibres is now bridged by recent techniques that analyse the chemical and mechanical kinetics of small components of a muscle fibre, subcellular myofibrils isolated from skeletal and cardiac muscle. Formed of serially arranged repeating units called sarcomeres, myofibrils have a complete fully structured ensemble of contractile and Ca2+ regulatory proteins. The small diameter of myofibrils (few micrometres) facilitates analysis of the kinetics of sarcomere contraction and relaxation induced by rapid changes of [ATP] or [Ca2+]. Among the processes studied on myofibrils are: (1) the Ca2+-regulated switch on/off of the troponin complex, (2) the chemical steps in the cross-bridge adenosine triphosphatase cycle, (3) the mechanics of force generation and (4) the length dynamics of individual sarcomeres. These studies give new insights into the kinetics of thin-filament regulation and of cross-bridge turnover, how cross-bridges transform chemical energy into mechanical work, and suggest that the cross-bridge ensembles of each half-sarcomere cooperate with each other across the half-sarcomere borders. Additionally, we now have a better understanding of muscle relaxation and its impairment in certain muscle diseases.

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