The effects of force inhibition by sodium vanadate on cross-bridge binding, force redevelopment, and Ca2+ activation in cardiac muscle

20Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Strongly bound, force-generating myosin cross-bridges play an important role as allosteric activators of cardiac thin filaments. Sodium vanadate (Vi) is a phosphate analog that inhibits force by preventing cross-bridge transition into forceproducing states. This study characterizes the mechanical state of cross-bridges with bound Vi as a tool to examine the contribution of cross-bridges to cardiac contractile activation. The Ki of force inhibition by Vi was ∼40 μM. Sinusoidal stiffness was inhibited with Vi, although to a lesser extent than force. We used chord stiffness measurements to monitor Vi-induced changes in cross-bridge attachment/detachment kinetics at saturating [Ca2+]. Vi decreased chord stiffness at the fastest rates of stretch, whereas at slow rates chord stiffness actually increased. This suggests a shift in cross-bridge population toward low force states with very slow attachment/detachment kinetics. Low angle x-ray diffraction measurements indicate that with Vi cross-bridge mass shifted away from thin filaments, implying decreased cross-bridge/thin filament interaction. The combined x-ray and mechanical data suggest at least two cross-bridge populations with Vi; one characteristic of normal cycling cross-bridges, and a population of weak-binding cross-bridges with bound Vi and slow attachment/detachment kinetics. The Ca2+ sensitivity of force (pCa50) and force redevelopment kinetics (kTR) were measured to study the effects of Vi on contractile activation. When maximal force was inhibited by 40% with Vi pCa 50 decreased, but greater force inhibition at higher [Vi] did not further alter pCa50. In contrast, the Ca2+ sensitivity of kTR was unaffected by Vi. Interestingly, when force was inhibited by Vi kTR increased at submaximal levels of Ca2+-activated force. Additionally, kTR is faster at saturating Ca2+ at [Vi] that inhibit force by >∼70%. The effects of Vi on kTR imply that kTR is determined not only by the intrinsic properties of the cross-bridge cycle, but also by cross-bridge contribution to thin filament activation © 2007 by the Biophysical Society.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Martyn, D. A., Smith, L., Kreutziger, K. L., Xu, S., Yu, L. C., & Regnier, M. (2007). The effects of force inhibition by sodium vanadate on cross-bridge binding, force redevelopment, and Ca2+ activation in cardiac muscle. Biophysical Journal, 92(12), 4379–4390. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.106.096768

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free