Johnson Chloe A, McGreig Jake E, Jeanfavre Sarah T, Walklate Jonathan, Vera Carlos D, Farré Marta, Mulvihill Daniel P, Baines Anthony J, Ridout Martin, Leinwand Leslie A, Wass Mark N, Geeves Michael A
School of Biosciences, University of Kent, Canterbury, United Kingdom.
BioFrontiers Institute and Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2021 Jun 10;19(6):e3001248. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3001248. eCollection 2021 Jun.
The speed of muscle contraction is related to body size; muscles in larger species contract at slower rates. Since contraction speed is a property of the myosin isoform expressed in a muscle, we investigated how sequence changes in a range of muscle myosin II isoforms enable this slower rate of muscle contraction. We considered 798 sequences from 13 mammalian myosin II isoforms to identify any adaptation to increasing body mass. We identified a correlation between body mass and sequence divergence for the motor domain of the 4 major adult myosin II isoforms (β/Type I, IIa, IIb, and IIx), suggesting that these isoforms have adapted to increasing body mass. In contrast, the non-muscle and developmental isoforms show no correlation of sequence divergence with body mass. Analysis of the motor domain sequence of β-myosin (predominant myosin in Type I/slow and cardiac muscle) from 67 mammals from 2 distinct clades identifies 16 sites, out of 800, associated with body mass (padj < 0.05) but not with the clade (padj > 0.05). Both clades change the same small set of amino acids, in the same order from small to large mammals, suggesting a limited number of ways in which contraction velocity can be successfully manipulated. To test this relationship, the 9 sites that differ between human and rat were mutated in the human β-myosin to match the rat sequence. Biochemical analysis revealed that the rat-human β-myosin chimera functioned like the native rat myosin with a 2-fold increase in both motility and in the rate of ADP release from the actin-myosin crossbridge (the step that limits contraction velocity). Thus, these sequence changes indicate adaptation of β-myosin as species mass increased to enable a reduced contraction velocity and heart rate.
肌肉收缩速度与身体大小有关;较大物种的肌肉收缩速度较慢。由于收缩速度是肌肉中表达的肌球蛋白同工型的一种特性,我们研究了一系列肌肉肌球蛋白II同工型的序列变化如何导致这种较慢的肌肉收缩速度。我们考虑了来自13种哺乳动物肌球蛋白II同工型的798个序列,以确定是否存在对体重增加的适应性变化。我们发现4种主要的成年肌球蛋白II同工型(β/ I型、IIa、IIb和IIx)的运动结构域的体重与序列差异之间存在相关性,这表明这些同工型已经适应了体重的增加。相比之下,非肌肉和发育同工型的序列差异与体重没有相关性。对来自两个不同进化枝的67种哺乳动物的β-肌球蛋白(I型/慢肌和心肌中的主要肌球蛋白)的运动结构域序列进行分析,在800个位点中确定了16个与体重相关的位点(padj < 0.05),但与进化枝无关(padj > 0.05)。两个进化枝从小型到大型哺乳动物都以相同的顺序改变了同一小部分氨基酸,这表明成功调节收缩速度的方式有限。为了验证这种关系,在人类β-肌球蛋白中对人与大鼠之间不同的9个位点进行突变,使其与大鼠序列匹配。生化分析表明,大鼠-人β-肌球蛋白嵌合体的功能类似于天然大鼠肌球蛋白,其运动性和肌动蛋白-肌球蛋白横桥释放ADP的速率(限制收缩速度的步骤)均增加了2倍。因此,这些序列变化表明随着物种体重增加,β-肌球蛋白发生了适应性变化,以实现降低的收缩速度和心率。