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Myosin dynamics during relaxation in mouse soleus muscle and modulation by 2'-deoxy-ATP.

Weikang MaMatthew ChildersJason MurrayFarid Moussavi-HaramiHenry GongRobert Samuel WeissValerie DaggettThomas IrvingMichael Regnier
Published in: The Journal of physiology (2020)
Here we used time-resolved small-angle X-ray diffraction coupled with force measurements to study the structural changes in FVB mouse skeletal muscle sarcomeres during relaxation after tetanus contraction. To estimate the rate of myosin deactivation, we followed the rate of the intensity recovery of the first-order myosin layer line (MLL1) and restoration of the resting spacing of the third and sixth order of meridional reflection (SM3 and SM6 ) following tetanic contraction. A transgenic mouse model with elevated skeletal muscle 2-deoxy-ATP (dATP) was used to study how myosin activators may affect soleus muscle relaxation. X-ray diffraction evidence indicates that with elevated dATP, myosin heads were extended closer to actin in resting muscle. Following contraction, there is a slight but significant delay in the decay of force relative to WT muscle while the return of myosin heads to an ordered resting state was initially slower, then became more rapid than in WT muscle. Molecular dynamics simulations of post-powerstroke myosin suggest that dATP induces structural changes in myosin that increase the surface area of the actin-binding regions, promoting myosin interaction with actin. With dATP, myosin heads may remain in an activated state near the thin filaments following relaxation, accounting for the delay in force decay and the initial delay in recovery of resting head configuration, and this could facilitate subsequent contractions.
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