4.6 Article

Microscale thermophoresis suggests a new model of regulation of cardiac myosin function via interaction with cardiac myosin-binding protein C

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 298, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101485

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Funding

  1. British Heart Foundation [FS/16/3/31887]

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The study reveals that cMyBP-C regulates the function of cardiac myosin by interacting with different regions of the myosin molecule. The N-terminal domains of cMyBP-C interact with the head and tail domains of myosin through phosphorylation-independent and phosphorylation-dependent interactions, while the highest affinity interaction sites between cMyBP-C and myosin S1 are located in the central domains.
The cardiac isoform of myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C) is a key regulatory protein found in cardiac myofilaments that can control the activation state of both the actin-containing thin and myosin-containing thick filaments. However, in contrast to thin filament-based mechanisms of regulation, the mechanism of myosin-based regulation by cMyBP-C has yet to be defined in detail. To clarify its function in this process, we used microscale thermophoresis to build an extensive interaction map between cMyBP-C and isolated fragments of beta-cardiac myosin. We show here that the regulatory N-terminal domains (C0C2) of cMyBP-C interact with both the myosin head (myosin S1) and tail domains (myosin S2) with micromolar affinity via phosphorylation-independent and phosphorylation-dependent interactions of domain C1 and the cardiac-specific m-motif, respectively. Moreover, we show that the interaction sites with the highest affinity between cMyBP-C and myosin S1 are localized to its central domains, which bind myosin with submicromolar affinity. We identified two separate interaction regions in the central C2C4 and C5C7 segments that compete for the same binding site on myosin S1, suggesting that cMyBP-C can crosslink the two myosin heads of a single myosin molecule and thereby stabilize it in the folded OFF state. Phosphorylation of the cardiac-specific m-motif by protein kinase A had no effect on the binding of either the N-terminal or the central segments to the myosin head domain, suggesting this might therefore represent a constitutively bound state of myosin associated with cMyBP-C. Based on our results, we propose a new model of regulation of cardiac myosin function by cMyBP-C.

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