Graded titin cleavage progressively reduces tension and uncovers the source of A-band stability in contracting muscle

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Abstract

The giant muscle protein titin is a major contributor to passive force; however, its role in active force generation is unresolved. Here, we use a novel titin-cleavage (TC) mouse model that allows specific and rapid cutting of elastic titin to quantify how titin-based forces define myocyte ultrastructure and mechanics. We show that under mechanical strain, as TC doubles from heterozygous to homozygous TC muscles, Z-disks become increasingly out of register while passive and active forces are reduced. Interactions of elastic titin with sarcomeric actin filaments are revealed. Strikingly, when titin-cleaved muscles contract, myosin-containing A-bands become split and adjacent myosin filaments move in opposite directions while also shedding myosins. This establishes intact titin filaments as critical force-transmission networks, buffering the forces observed by myosin filaments during contraction. To perform this function, elastic titin must change stiffness or extensible length, unveiling its fundamental role as an activation-dependent spring in contracting muscle.

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Li, Y., Hesseit, A. L., Unger, A., Ing, D., Recker, J., Koser, F., … Linke, W. A. (2020). Graded titin cleavage progressively reduces tension and uncovers the source of A-band stability in contracting muscle. ELife, 9, 1–23. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.64107

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