Mechanisms of pathogenicity in the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-associated TPM1 variant S215L

Author:

Halder Saiti S1ORCID,Rynkiewicz Michael J2,Creso Jenette G1,Sewanan Lorenzo R13ORCID,Howland Lindsey4,Moore Jeffrey R4,Lehman William2,Campbell Stuart G1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University , New Haven, CT 06511

2. Department of Physiology/Biophysics , Boston University, Boston, MA 02215

3. Department of Internal Medicine, Columbia University , New York, NY 10032

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Massachusetts Lowell , MA 01854

Abstract

Abstract Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an inherited disorder often caused by mutations to sarcomeric genes. Many different HCM-associated TPM1 mutations have been identified but they vary in their degrees of severity, prevalence, and rate of disease progression. The pathogenicity of many TPM1 variants detected in the clinical population remains unknown. Our objective was to employ a computational modeling pipeline to assess pathogenicity of one such variant of unknown significance, TPM1 S215L, and validate predictions using experimental methods. Molecular dynamic simulations of tropomyosin on actin suggest that the S215L significantly destabilizes the blocked regulatory state while increasing flexibility of the tropomyosin chain. These changes were quantitatively represented in a Markov model of thin-filament activation to infer the impacts of S215L on myofilament function. Simulations of in vitro motility and isometric twitch force predicted that the mutation would increase Ca2+ sensitivity and twitch force while slowing twitch relaxation. In vitro motility experiments with thin filaments containing TPM1 S215L revealed higher Ca2+ sensitivity compared with wild type. Three-dimensional genetically engineered heart tissues expressing TPM1 S215L exhibited hypercontractility, upregulation of hypertrophic gene markers, and diastolic dysfunction. These data form a mechanistic description of TPM1 S215L pathogenicity that starts with disruption of the mechanical and regulatory properties of tropomyosin, leading thereafter to hypercontractility and finally induction of a hypertrophic phenotype. These simulations and experiments support the classification of S215L as a pathogenic mutation and support the hypothesis that an inability to adequately inhibit actomyosin interactions is the mechanism whereby thin-filament mutations cause HCM.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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