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Publication : Transgenic mouse α- and β-cardiac myosins containing the R403Q mutation show isoform-dependent transient kinetic differences.

First Author  Lowey S Year  2013
Journal  J Biol Chem Volume  288
Issue  21 Pages  14780-7
PubMed ID  23580644 Mgi Jnum  J:199626
Mgi Id  MGI:5503296 Doi  10.1074/jbc.M113.450668
Citation  Lowey S, et al. (2013) Transgenic mouse alpha- and beta-cardiac myosins containing the R403Q mutation show isoform-dependent transient kinetic differences. J Biol Chem 288(21):14780-7
abstractText  Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) is a major cause of sudden cardiac death in young athletes. The discovery in 1990 that a point mutation at residue 403 (R403Q) in the beta-myosin heavy chain (MHC) caused a severe form of FHC was the first of many demonstrations linking FHC to mutations in muscle proteins. A mouse model for FHC has been widely used to study the mechanochemical properties of mutated cardiac myosin, but mouse hearts express alpha-MHC, whereas the ventricles of larger mammals express predominantly beta-MHC. To address the role of the isoform backbone on function, we generated a transgenic mouse in which the endogenous alpha-MHC was partially replaced with transgenically encoded beta-MHC or alpha-MHC. A His6 tag was cloned at the N terminus, along with R403Q, to facilitate isolation of myosin subfragment 1 (S1). Stopped flow kinetics were used to measure the equilibrium constants and rates of nucleotide binding and release for the mouse S1 isoforms bound to actin. For the wild-type isoforms, we found that the affinity of MgADP for alpha-S1 (100 muM) is ~ 4-fold weaker than for beta-S1 (25 muM). Correspondingly, the MgADP release rate for alpha-S1 (350 s(-1)) is ~3-fold greater than for beta-S1 (120 s(-1)). Introducing the R403Q mutation caused only a minor reduction in kinetics for beta-S1, but R403Q in alpha-S1 caused the ADP release rate to increase by 20% (430 s(-1)). These transient kinetic studies on mouse cardiac myosins provide strong evidence that the functional impact of an FHC mutation on myosin depends on the isoform backbone.
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