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Publication : Deleting titin's I-band/A-band junction reveals critical roles for titin in biomechanical sensing and cardiac function.

First Author  Granzier HL Year  2014
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  111
Issue  40 Pages  14589-94
PubMed ID  25246556 Mgi Jnum  J:216466
Mgi Id  MGI:5608842 Doi  10.1073/pnas.1411493111
Citation  Granzier HL, et al. (2014) Deleting titin's I-band/A-band junction reveals critical roles for titin in biomechanical sensing and cardiac function. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 111(40):14589-94
abstractText  Titin, the largest protein known, forms a giant filament in muscle where it spans the half sarcomere from Z disk to M band. Here we genetically targeted a stretch of 14 immunoglobulin-like and fibronectin type 3 domains that comprises the I-band/A-band (IA) junction and obtained a viable mouse model. Super-resolution optical microscopy (structured illumination microscopy, SIM) and electron microscopy were used to study the thick filament length and titin's molecular elasticity. SIM showed that the IA junction functionally belongs to the relatively stiff A-band region of titin. The stiffness of A-band titin was found to be high, relative to that of I-band titin ( approximately 40-fold higher) but low, relative to that of the myosin-based thick filament ( approximately 70-fold lower). Sarcomere stretch therefore results in movement of A-band titin with respect to the thick filament backbone, and this might constitute a novel length-sensing mechanism. Findings disproved that titin at the IA junction is crucial for thick filament length control, settling a long-standing hypothesis. SIM also showed that deleting the IA junction moves the attachment point of titin's spring region away from the Z disk, increasing the strain on titin's molecular spring elements. Functional studies from the cellular to ex vivo and in vivo left ventricular chamber levels showed that this causes diastolic dysfunction and other symptoms of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Thus, our work supports titin's important roles in diastolic function and disease of the heart.
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