4.0 Article

Mechanisms of Frank-Starling law of the heart and stretch activation in striated muscles may have a common molecular origin

Journal

JOURNAL OF MUSCLE RESEARCH AND CELL MOTILITY
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 355-366

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10974-020-09595-2

Keywords

Length dependent activation; Sarcomere length; Titin and kettin; Delayed tension; Oscillatory work; Stiffness

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL127691, HL138007, HL146676]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Vertebrate cardiac muscle exhibits larger systolic force with increasing end diastolic chamber volume, known as Frank-Starling Law or length dependent activation (LDA). This phenomenon is explained by factors such as lattice spacing, increased Ca2+ sensitivity, titin-mediated rearrangement of myosin heads, and stretch activation, which may share mechanisms with insect muscles. Sarcomere stiffness caused by titin in vertebrate muscles is a key contributor to LDA.
Vertebrate cardiac muscle generates progressively larger systolic force when the end diastolic chamber volume is increased, a property called the Frank-Starling Law, or length dependent activation (LDA). In this mechanism a larger force develops when the sarcomere length (SL) increased, and the overlap between thick and thin filament decreases, indicating increased production of force per unit length of the overlap. To account for this phenomenon at the molecular level, we examined several hypotheses: as the muscle length is increased, (1) lattice spacing decreases, (2) Ca2+ sensitivity increases, (3) titin mediated rearrangement of myosin heads to facilitate actomyosin interaction, (4) increased SL activates cross-bridges (CBs) in the super relaxed state, (5) increased series stiffness at longer SL promotes larger elementary force/CB to account for LDA, and (6) stretch activation (SA) observed in insect muscles and LDA in vertebrate muscles may have similar mechanisms. SA is also known as delayed tension or oscillatory work, and universally observed among insect flight muscles, as well as in vertebrate skeletal and cardiac muscles. The sarcomere stiffness observed in relaxed muscles may significantly contributes to the mechanisms of LDA. In vertebrate striated muscles, the sarcomere stiffness is mainly caused by titin, a single filamentary protein spanning from Z-line to M-line and tightly associated with the myosin thick filament. In insect flight muscles, kettin connects Z-line and the thick filament to stabilize the sarcomere structure. In vertebrate cardiac muscles, titin plays a similar role, and may account for LDA and may constitute a molecular mechanism of Frank-Starling response.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available