Persistence length of titin from rabbit skeletal muscles measured with scattering and microrheology techniques

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Abstract

The persistence length of titin from rabbit skeletal muscles was measured using a combination of static and dynamic light scattering, and neutron small angle scattering. Values of persistence length in the range 9-16 nm were found for titin-II, which corresponds to mainly physiologically inelastic A-band part of the protein, and for a proteolytic fragment with 100-nm contour length from the physiologically elastic I-band part. The ratio of the hydrodynamic radius to the static radius of gyration indicates that the proteins obey Gaussian statistics typical of a flexible polymer in a θ-solvent. Furthermore, measurements of the flexibility as a function of temperature demonstrate that titin-II and the I-band titin fragment experience a similar denaturation process; unfolding begins at 318 K and proceeds in two stages: an initial gradual 50% change in persistence length is followed by a sharp unwinding transition at 338 K. Complementary microrheology (video particle tracking) measurements indicate that the viscoelasticity in dilute solution behaves according to the Flory/Fox model, providing a value of the radius of gyration for titin-II (63 ± 1 nm) in agreement with static light scattering and small angle neutron scattering results. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.

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Di Cola, E., Waigh, T. A., Trinick, J., Tskhovrebova, L., Houmeida, A., Pyckhout-Hintzen, W., & Dewhurst, C. (2005). Persistence length of titin from rabbit skeletal muscles measured with scattering and microrheology techniques. Biophysical Journal, 88(6), 4095–4106. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.104.054908

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