3.9 Review

The titin N2B and N2A regions: biomechanical and metabolic signaling hubs in cross-striated muscles

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL REVIEWS
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 653-677

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1007/s12551-021-00836-3

Keywords

Muscle; Titin; Sarcomere; Signaling; Mechanosensor; Muscle mechanics

Categories

Funding

  1. We would like to thank Alain Hirschy for provision of the beta-catenin/FHL2 double knockout information. We are also grateful to Evelyne and Jean-Claude Perriard as well as Ju Chen for their scientific insight, support and generosity.

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This review highlights the biological roles and properties of the titin N2B and N2A regions in health and disease, with a special emphasis on the functions of Ankrd and FHL proteins as mechanosensors modulating muscle-specific signaling and muscle growth. The sarcomere region also emerged as a hotspot for the modulation of passive muscle mechanics through altered titin phosphorylation and splicing, as well as tethering mechanisms linking titin to the thin filament system.
Muscle specific signaling has been shown to originate from myofilaments and their associated cellular structures, including the sarcomeres, costameres or the cardiac intercalated disc. Two signaling hubs that play important biomechanical roles for cardiac and/or skeletal muscle physiology are the N2B and N2A regions in the giant protein titin. Prominent proteins associated with these regions in titin are chaperones Hsp90 and alpha B-crystallin, members of the four-and-a-half LIM (FHL) and muscle ankyrin repeat protein (Ankrd) families, as well as thin filament-associated proteins, such as myopalladin. This review highlights biological roles and properties of the titin N2B and N2A regions in health and disease. Special emphasis is placed on functions of Ankrd and FHL proteins as mechanosensors that modulate muscle-specific signaling and muscle growth. This region of the sarcomere also emerged as a hotspot for the modulation of passive muscle mechanics through altered titin phosphorylation and splicing, as well as tethering mechanisms that link titin to the thin filament system.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.9
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available