3.8 Article

Synthetic peptides of actin-tropomyosin binding region of troponin I and heat shock protein 20 modulate the relaxation process of skinned preparations of taenia caeci from guinea pig

Journal

JAPANESE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 6, Pages 373-378

Publisher

CENTER ACADEMIC PUBL JAPAN
DOI: 10.2170/jjphysiol.RP002605

Keywords

smooth muscle; troponin I; heat shock protein 20; skinned preparations; relaxation; latch

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To explore the possible role of the thin filament-linked regulation of cross-bridge cycling in living smooth muscle contraction, we studied the effects of Tnlp and HSP20p, a synthetic peptide originating from an actin tropomyosin binding region of rabbit cardiac troponin l (residues 136147; GKFKRPTLRRVR), and that of human heat shock protein 20 (residues 110-121; GFVAREF-HRRYR) on the relaxation of skinned (cell membrane ilized) preparations from guinea pig taenia caeci. An active stress of the skinned preparations, resulting from actin-myosin interaction, rapidly decayed following Ca2+ removal (relaxation). Tnlp accelerated the initial rapid phase and slowed the following slow phase of the relaxation. On the other hand, HSP20p only slowed the whole process of the relaxation. The relaxation time courses were well fitted in a double exponential manner, and the double exponential decay of the stress could be explained as a portion of fast-detaching cross bridges not to dissociate rapidly by Ca2+ removal, but to transfer to latch bridges dissociating very slowly. Our present results suggested that (i) Tnlp and HSP20p accelerated transferring from fast-detaching cross bridges to slow-detaching (latch) bridges, and (ii) Trilp accelerated dissociation of the fast-detaching cross bridges and the latch bridges, while HSP20p slowed dissociation of the fast-detaching cross bridges. Since Tnlp and HSP20p are thought to bind to actin and tropomyosin, but not to myosin, we concluded that through thin-filament-dependent mechanisms these peptides regulated the formation and/or deformation of latch bridges in smooth muscle. The thin-filament-dependent regulation might physiologically control the stress maintenance and relaxation in smooth muscle cells.

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