Myosin head orientation: a structural determinant for the Frank-Starling relationship

Author:

Farman Gerrie P.1,Gore David2,Allen Edward13,Schoenfelt Kelly13,Irving Thomas C.2,de Tombe Pieter P.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Center for Cardiovascular Research, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago;

2. Department Biological, Chemical and Physical Sciences, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois

3. Department of Cell and Molecular Physiology, Stritch School of Medicine Maywood, Loyola University of Chicago, Maywood; and

Abstract

The cellular mechanism underlying the Frank-Starling law of the heart is myofilament length-dependent activation. The mechanism(s) whereby sarcomeres detect changes in length and translate this into increased sensitivity to activating calcium has been elusive. Small-angle X-ray diffraction studies have revealed that the intact myofilament lattice undergoes numerous structural changes upon an increase in sarcomere length (SL): lattice spacing and the I1,1/I1,0 intensity ratio decreases, whereas the M3 meridional reflection intensity (IM3) increases, concomitant with increases in diastolic and systolic force. Using a short (∼10 ms) X-ray exposure just before electrical stimulation, we were able to obtain detailed structural information regarding the effects of external osmotic compression (with mannitol) and obtain SL on thin intact electrically stimulated isolated rat right ventricular trabeculae. We show that over the same incremental increases in SL, the relative changes in systolic force track more closely to the relative changes in myosin head orientation (as reported by IM3) than to the relative changes in lattice spacing. We conclude that myosin head orientation before activation determines myocardial sarcomere activation levels and that this may be the dominant mechanism for length-dependent activation.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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