Helmes M, Trombitás K, Granzier H
Department of Veterinary and Comparative Anatomy, Pharmacology, and Physiology, Washington State University, Pullman 99164-6520, USA.
Circ Res. 1996 Sep;79(3):619-26. doi: 10.1161/01.res.79.3.619.
When relaxed after contraction, isolated cardiac myocytes quickly relengthen back to their slack length. The molecular basis of the force that underlies passive relengthening, known as restoring force, is not well understood. In a previous study of titin's elasticity in cardiac myocytes, we proposed that titin/connectin develops restoring force, in addition to passive force. This study tested whether titin indeed contributes to the restoring force in cardiac myocytes. Skinned rat cardiac myocytes in suspension were shortened by approximately 20%, using Ca(2+)-independent shortening, followed by relaxation. Cells were observed to relengthen until they reached their original slack sarcomere length. However, the ability to relengthen was abolished after cells had been treated for 12 minutes with trypsin (0.25 microgram/mL, 20 degrees C). Gel electrophoresis showed that this treatment had degraded titin without clearly affecting other proteins, and immunoelectron microscopy revealed that the elastic segment of titin in the I band was missing from the sarcomere. Restoring force was also directly measured, before and after trypsin treatment. Restoring force of control cells was -61 +/- 20 micrograms (per cell) at a sarcomere length of 1.70 microns. Comparison of our results with those of activated trabeculae indicated that a large fraction of restoring force of cardiac muscle originates from within the myocyte. Restoring force of myocytes was found to be depressed after titin had been degraded with trypsin. We conclude that cardiac, titin indeed develops restoring force in shortened cardiac myocytes, in addition to passive force in stretched cells, and that titin functions as a bidirectional spring. Our work suggests that at the level of the whole heart, part of the actomyosin-based active force that is developed during systole is harnessed by titin, allowing for elastic diastolic recoil and aiding in ventricular filling.
在收缩后放松时,分离的心肌细胞会迅速重新伸长至其松弛长度。被动重新伸长所依赖的力(即恢复力)的分子基础尚未完全明确。在先前一项关于心肌细胞中肌联蛋白弹性的研究中,我们提出肌联蛋白/连接蛋白除了产生被动力外,还能产生恢复力。本研究旨在测试肌联蛋白是否确实对心肌细胞的恢复力有贡献。使用与钙离子无关的缩短方式,将悬浮的去表皮大鼠心肌细胞缩短约20%,随后使其松弛。观察到细胞会重新伸长,直至达到其原始的松弛肌节长度。然而,在用胰蛋白酶(0.25微克/毫升,20℃)处理细胞12分钟后,细胞重新伸长的能力丧失。凝胶电泳显示,这种处理使肌联蛋白降解,而对其他蛋白质没有明显影响,免疫电子显微镜显示肌节中I带的肌联蛋白弹性片段缺失。在胰蛋白酶处理前后还直接测量了恢复力。在肌节长度为1.70微米时,对照细胞的恢复力为-61±20微克(每细胞)。将我们的结果与活化小梁的结果进行比较表明,心肌的大部分恢复力源自心肌细胞内部。在用胰蛋白酶降解肌联蛋白后,发现心肌细胞的恢复力降低。我们得出结论,心肌中的肌联蛋白除了在拉伸细胞中产生被动力外,在缩短的心肌细胞中确实也能产生恢复力,并且肌联蛋白起到双向弹簧的作用。我们的数据表明,在整个心脏水平,收缩期产生的部分基于肌动球蛋白的主动力被肌联蛋白利用,从而实现弹性舒张期回弹并有助于心室充盈。