Skeletal muscle's ability to shorten and lengthen against a load is a fundamental property, presumably reflecting the inherent load-dependence of the myosin molecular motor. Here we report the velocity of a single actin filament translocated by a mini-ensemble of skeletal myosin ∼8 heads under constant loads up to 15 pN in a laser trap assay. Actin filament velocity decreased with increasing load hyberbolically, with unloaded velocity and stall force differing by a factor of 2 with [ATP] (30 vs. 100 μM). Analysis of actin filament movement revealed that forward motion was punctuated with rapid backward 60-nm slips, with the slip frequency increasing with resistive load. At stall force, myosin-generated forward movement was balanced by backward slips, whereas at loads greater than stall, myosin could no longer sustain forward motion, resulting in negative velocities as in eccentric contractions of whole muscle. Thus, the force-velocity relationship of muscle reflects both the inherent load-dependence of the actomyosin interaction and the balance between forward and reverse motion observed at the molecular level. © 2005 by the Biophysical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Debold, E. P., Patlak, J. B., & Warshaw, D. M. (2005). Slip sliding away: Load-dependence of velocity generated by skeletal muscle myosin molecules in the laser trap. Biophysical Journal, 89(5). https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.105.072967
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.