Abstract
SUMMARYIn contracting striated muscle titin acts as a spring in parallel with the array of myosin motors in each half-sarcomere and could prevent the intrinsic instability of thousands of serially linked half-sarcomeres, if its stiffness, at physiological sarcomere lengths (SL), were ten times larger than reported. Here we define titin mechanical properties during tetanic stimulation of single fibres of frog muscle by suppressing myosin motor responses with Para-Nitro-Blebbistatin, which is able to freeze thick filament in the resting state. We discover that thin filament activation switches I-band titin spring from the large SL-dependent extensibility of the OFF-state to an ON-state in which titin acts as a SL-independent mechanical rectifier, allowing free shortening while opposing stretch with an effective stiffness 4 pN nm−1 per half-thick filament. In this way during contraction titin limits weak half-sarcomere elongation to a few % and, also, provides an efficient link for mechanosensing-based thick filament activation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory