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Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal

Titin exhibits an interaction between its PEVK segment and the actin filament resulting in viscosity, a speed dependent resistive force, which significantly influences diastolic filling in mice. While diastolic disease is clinically pervasive, humans express a more compliant titin (N2BA:N2B ratio ~0...

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Autores principales: Chung, Charles S., Bogomolovas, Julius, Gasch, Alexander, Hidalgo, Carlos G., Labeit, Siegfried, Granzier, Henk L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3227466/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22162634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/310791
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author Chung, Charles S.
Bogomolovas, Julius
Gasch, Alexander
Hidalgo, Carlos G.
Labeit, Siegfried
Granzier, Henk L.
author_facet Chung, Charles S.
Bogomolovas, Julius
Gasch, Alexander
Hidalgo, Carlos G.
Labeit, Siegfried
Granzier, Henk L.
author_sort Chung, Charles S.
collection PubMed
description Titin exhibits an interaction between its PEVK segment and the actin filament resulting in viscosity, a speed dependent resistive force, which significantly influences diastolic filling in mice. While diastolic disease is clinically pervasive, humans express a more compliant titin (N2BA:N2B ratio ~0.5–1.0) than mice (N2BA:N2B ratio ~0.2). To examine PEVK-actin based viscosity in compliant titin-tissues, we used pig cardiac tissue that expresses titin isoforms similar to that in humans. Stretch-hold experiments were performed at speeds from 0.1 to 10 lengths/s from slack sarcomere lengths (SL) to SL of 2.15 μm. Viscosity was calculated from the slope of stress-relaxation vs stretch speed. Recombinant PEVK was added to compete off native interactions and this found to reduce the slope by 35%, suggesting that PEVK-actin interactions are a strong contributor of viscosity. Frequency sweeps were performed at frequencies of 0.1–400 Hz and recombinant protein reduced viscous moduli by 40% at 2.15 μm and by 50% at 2.25 μm, suggesting a SL-dependent nature of viscosity that might prevent SL “overshoot” at long diastolic SLs. This study is the first to show that viscosity is present at physiologic speeds in the pig and supports the physiologic relevance of PEVK-actin interactions in humans in both health and disease.
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spelling pubmed-32274662011-12-08 Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal Chung, Charles S. Bogomolovas, Julius Gasch, Alexander Hidalgo, Carlos G. Labeit, Siegfried Granzier, Henk L. J Biomed Biotechnol Research Article Titin exhibits an interaction between its PEVK segment and the actin filament resulting in viscosity, a speed dependent resistive force, which significantly influences diastolic filling in mice. While diastolic disease is clinically pervasive, humans express a more compliant titin (N2BA:N2B ratio ~0.5–1.0) than mice (N2BA:N2B ratio ~0.2). To examine PEVK-actin based viscosity in compliant titin-tissues, we used pig cardiac tissue that expresses titin isoforms similar to that in humans. Stretch-hold experiments were performed at speeds from 0.1 to 10 lengths/s from slack sarcomere lengths (SL) to SL of 2.15 μm. Viscosity was calculated from the slope of stress-relaxation vs stretch speed. Recombinant PEVK was added to compete off native interactions and this found to reduce the slope by 35%, suggesting that PEVK-actin interactions are a strong contributor of viscosity. Frequency sweeps were performed at frequencies of 0.1–400 Hz and recombinant protein reduced viscous moduli by 40% at 2.15 μm and by 50% at 2.25 μm, suggesting a SL-dependent nature of viscosity that might prevent SL “overshoot” at long diastolic SLs. This study is the first to show that viscosity is present at physiologic speeds in the pig and supports the physiologic relevance of PEVK-actin interactions in humans in both health and disease. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2011 2011-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3227466/ /pubmed/22162634 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/310791 Text en Copyright © 2011 Charles S. Chung et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chung, Charles S.
Bogomolovas, Julius
Gasch, Alexander
Hidalgo, Carlos G.
Labeit, Siegfried
Granzier, Henk L.
Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title_full Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title_fullStr Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title_full_unstemmed Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title_short Titin-Actin Interaction: PEVK-Actin-Based Viscosity in a Large Animal
title_sort titin-actin interaction: pevk-actin-based viscosity in a large animal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3227466/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22162634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/310791
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