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From the Department of Physiology (II) (N.F., H.K., S.K.), The Jikei University School of Medicine, Nishishinbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan; Department of Physics (S.I.), School of Science and Engineering, Advanced Research Institute for Science and Engineering (S.I.), and Materials Research Laboratory for Bioscience and Photonics (S.I.), Waseda University, Okubo, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
AbstractThe effect of MgADP on
the sarcomere length (SL) dependence of tension generation was
investigated using skinned rat ventricular
trabeculae. Increasing SL from 1.9 to 2.3 µm
decreased the muscle width by
11% and shifted the midpoint of the
pCa-tension relationship (pCa50) leftward by about 0.2 pCa
units. MgADP (0.1, 1, and 5 mmol/L) augmented maximal and
submaximal Ca2+-activated tension and concomitantly
diminished the SL-dependent shift of pCa50 in a
concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, pimobendan, a
Ca2+ sensitizer, which promotes Ca2+ binding to
troponin C (TnC), exhibited no effect on the SL-dependent shift of
pCa50, suggesting that TnC does not participate in the
modulation of SL-dependent tension generation by MgADP. At a SL of
1.9 µm, osmotic compression, produced by 5% wt/vol dextran
(molecular weight
464 000), reduced the muscle width by
13% and
shifted pCa50 leftward to a similar degree as that observed
when increasing SL to 2.3 µm. This favors the idea that a
decrease in the interfilament lattice spacing is the primary mechanism
for SL-dependent tension generation. MgADP (5 mmol/L) markedly
attenuated the dextran-induced shift of pCa50, and the
degree of attenuation was similar to that observed in a study of
varying SL. The actomyosin-ADP complex (AM.ADP) induced by exogenous
MgADP has been reported to cooperatively promote myosin attachment to
the thin filament. We hereby conclude that the increase in the number
of force-generating crossbridges on a decrease in the lattice spacing
is masked by the cooperative effect of AM.ADP, resulting in depressed
SL-dependent tension generation. The full text of this article is
available at http://www.circresaha.org.
Key Words: MgADP pimobendan Ca2+ sensitivity cardiac muscle sarcomere length
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