Prolonged cross-bridge binding triggers muscle dysfunction in a Drosophila model of myosin-based hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
William A KronertKaylyn M BellMeera C ViswanathanGirish C MelkaniAdriana S TrujilloAlice HuangAnju MelkaniAnthony CammaratoDouglas M SwankSanford I BernsteinPublished in: eLife (2018)
K146N is a dominant mutation in human β-cardiac myosin heavy chain, which causes hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. We examined how Drosophila muscle responds to this mutation and integratively analyzed the biochemical, physiological and mechanical foundations of the disease. ATPase assays, actin motility, and indirect flight muscle mechanics suggest at least two rate constants of the cross-bridge cycle are altered by the mutation: increased myosin attachment to actin and decreased detachment, yielding prolonged binding. This increases isometric force generation, but also resistive force and work absorption during cyclical contractions, resulting in decreased work, power output, flight ability and degeneration of flight muscle sarcomere morphology. Consistent with prolonged cross-bridge binding serving as the mechanistic basis of the disease and with human phenotypes, 146N/+ hearts are hypercontractile with increased tension generation periods, decreased diastolic/systolic diameters and myofibrillar disarray. This suggests that screening mutated Drosophila hearts could rapidly identify hypertrophic cardiomyopathy alleles and treatments.
Keyphrases
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- left ventricular
- binding protein
- skeletal muscle
- endothelial cells
- heart failure
- blood pressure
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- single molecule
- dna binding
- pluripotent stem cells
- escherichia coli
- oxidative stress
- high throughput
- resistance training
- cell migration
- body composition
- biofilm formation
- high intensity