Abstract
Skeletal muscle force production is increased at longer compared to shorter muscle lengths because of length-dependent priming of thick filament proteins in the contractile unit before contraction. Using small-angle X-ray diffraction in combination with a mouse model that specifically cleaves the stretch-sensitive titin protein, we found that titin cleavage diminished the length-dependent priming of the thick filament. Strikingly, a titin-sensitive, length-dependent priming was also present in thin filaments, which seems only possible via bridge proteins between thick and thin filaments in resting muscle, potentially myosin-binding protein C. We further show that these bridges can be forcibly ruptured via high-speed stretches. Our results advance a paradigm shift to the fundamental regulation of length-dependent priming, with titin as the key driver.
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Hessel, A. L., Ma, W., Mazara, N., Rice, P. E., Nissen, D., Gong, H., … Linke, W. A. (2022). Titin force in muscle cells alters lattice order, thick and thin filament protein formation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(48). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2209441119
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