4.7 Article

Hypercontractile mutant of ventricular myosin essential light chain leads to disruption of sarcomeric structure and function and results in restrictive cardiomyopathy in mice

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH
Volume 113, Issue 10, Pages 1124-1136

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvx060

Keywords

Cardiac myosin essential light chain; Diastolic and systolic dysfunction; Hypercontractility; Myosin step size; Proteomics

Funding

  1. Mayo Foundation
  2. American Heart Association [15PRE23020006]
  3. DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  4. [NIH-HL123255]
  5. [NIH-HL096819]
  6. [NIH-P41-GM103622]
  7. [NIH-AR049277]

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Aims The E143K (Glu -> Lys) mutation in the myosin essential light chain has been associated with restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) in humans, but the mechanisms that underlie the development of defective cardiac function are unknown. Using transgenic E143K-RCM mice, we sought to determine the molecular and cellular triggers of E143K-induced heart remodelling. Methods and results The E143K-induced abnormalities in cardiac function and morphology observed by echocardiography and invasive haemodynamics were paralleled by augmented active and passive tension measured in skinned papillary muscle fibres compared with wild-type (WT)-generated force. In vitro, E143K-myosin had increased duty ratio and binding affinity to actin compared with WT-myosin, increased actin-activated ATPase activity and slower rates of ATP-dependent dissociation of the acto-myosin complex, indicating an E143K-induced myosin hypercontractility. E143K was also observed to reduce the level of myosin regulatory light chain phosphorylation while that of troponin-I remained unchanged. Small-angle X-ray diffraction data showed a decrease in the filament lattice spacing (d(1,0)) with no changes in the equatorial reflections intensity ratios (I-1,I-1/I-1,I-0) in E143K vs. WT skinned papillary muscles. The hearts of mutant-mice demonstrated ultrastructural defects and fibrosis that progressively worsened in senescent animals and these changes were hypothesized to contribute to diastolic disturbance and to mild systolic dysfunction. Gene expression profiles of E143K-hearts supported the histopathology results and showed an upregulation of stress-response and collagen genes. Finally, proteomic analysis evidenced RCM-dependent metabolic adaptations and higher energy demands in E143K vs. WT hearts. Conclusions As a result of the E143K-induced myosin hypercontractility, the hearts of RCM mice model exhibited cardiac dysfunction, stiff ventricles and physiological, morphologic, and metabolic remodelling consistent with the development of RCM. Future efforts should be directed toward normalization of myosin motor function and the use of myosinspecific therapeutics to avert the hypercontractile state of E143K-myosin and prevent pathological cardiac remodelling.

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