Relaxed tarantula skeletal muscle has two ATP energy-saving mechanisms

Author:

Ma Weikang1ORCID,Duno-Miranda Sebastian2ORCID,Irving Thomas1ORCID,Craig Roger3ORCID,Padrón Raúl3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Biophysics Collaborative Access Team, Department of Biological Sciences, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL

2. Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT

3. Division of Cell Biology and Imaging, Department of Radiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA

Abstract

Myosin molecules in the relaxed thick filaments of striated muscle have a helical arrangement in which the heads of each molecule interact with each other, forming the interacting-heads motif (IHM). In relaxed mammalian skeletal muscle, this helical ordering occurs only at temperatures >20°C and is disrupted when temperature is decreased. Recent x-ray diffraction studies of live tarantula skeletal muscle have suggested that the two myosin heads of the IHM (blocked heads [BHs] and free heads [FHs]) have very different roles and dynamics during contraction. Here, we explore temperature-induced changes in the BHs and FHs in relaxed tarantula skeletal muscle. We find a change with decreasing temperature that is similar to that in mammals, while increasing temperature induces a different behavior in the heads. At 22.5°C, the BHs and FHs containing ADP.Pi are fully helically organized, but they become progressively disordered as temperature is lowered or raised. Our interpretation suggests that at low temperature, while the BHs remain ordered the FHs become disordered due to transition of the heads to a straight conformation containing Mg.ATP. Above 27.5°C, the nucleotide remains as ADP.Pi, but while BHs remain ordered, half of the FHs become progressively disordered, released semipermanently at a midway distance to the thin filaments while the remaining FHs are docked as swaying heads. We propose a thermosensing mechanism for tarantula skeletal muscle to explain these changes. Our results suggest that tarantula skeletal muscle thick filaments, in addition to having a superrelaxation–based ATP energy-saving mechanism in the range of 8.5–40°C, also exhibit energy saving at lower temperatures (<22.5°C), similar to the proposed refractory state in mammals.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

U.S. Department of Energy

Argonne National Laboratory

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Physiology

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