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Mechanical parameters of the molecular motor myosin II determined in permeabilised fibres from slow and fast skeletal muscles of the rabbit.

Valentina PercarioSimona BoncompagniFeliciano ProtasiIrene PerticiFrancesca PinzautiMarco Caremani
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2018)
The skeletal muscle exhibits large functional differences depending on the myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform expressed in its molecular motor, myosin II. The differences in the mechanical features of force generation by myosin isoforms were investigated in situ by using fast sarcomere-level mechanical methods in permeabilised fibres (sarcomere length 2.4 μm, temperature 12°C, 4% dextran T-500) from slow (soleus, containing the MHC-1 isoform) and fast (psoas, containing the MHC-2X isoform) skeletal muscle of the rabbit. The stiffness of the half-sarcomere was determined at the plateau of Ca2+ -activated isometric contractions and in rigor and analysed with a model that accounted for the filament compliance to estimate the stiffness of the myosin motor (ε). ε was 0.56 ± 0.04 and 1.70 ± 0.37 pN nm-1 for the slow and fast isoform, respectively, while the average strain per attached motor (s0 ) was similar (∼3.3 nm) in both isoforms. Consequently the force per motor (F0  = εs0 ) was three times smaller in the slow isoform than in the fast isoform (1.89 ± 0.43 versus 5.35 ± 1.51 pN). The fraction of actin-attached motors responsible for maximum isometric force at saturating Ca2+ (T0,4.5 ) was 0.47 ± 0.09 in soleus fibres, 70% larger than that in psoas fibres (0.29 ± 0.08), so that F0 in slow fibres was decreased by only 53%. The lower stiffness and force of the slow myosin isoform open the question of the molecular basis of the higher efficiency of slow muscle with respect to fast muscle.
Keyphrases
  • skeletal muscle
  • binding protein
  • single molecule
  • insulin resistance
  • photodynamic therapy
  • adipose tissue
  • resistance training
  • atomic force microscopy
  • metabolic syndrome
  • mass spectrometry