Skeletal muscle resists stretch by rapid binding of the second motor domain of myosin to actin
0301 basic medicine
570
Muscle Fibers, Skeletal
Rana temporaria
500
Myosins
Actins
Protein Structure, Tertiary
03 medical and health sciences
motor proteins; myosin II
Muscle Stretching Exercises
Animals
Muscle, Skeletal
Protein Binding
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.0707626104
Publication Date:
2007-12-07T01:44:47Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
A shortening muscle is a machine that converts metabolic energy into mechanical work, but, when a muscle is stretched, it acts as a brake, generating a high resistive force at low metabolic cost. The braking action of muscle can be activated with remarkable speed, as when the leg extensor muscles rapidly decelerate the body at the end of a jump. Here we used time-resolved x-ray and mechanical measurements on isolated muscle cells to elucidate the molecular basis of muscle braking and its rapid control. We show that a stretch of only 5 nm between each overlapping set of myosin and actin filaments in a muscle sarcomere is sufficient to double the number of myosin motors attached to actin within a few milliseconds. Each myosin molecule has two motor domains, only one of which is attached to actin during shortening or activation at constant length. A stretch strains the attached motor domain, and we propose that combined steric and mechanical coupling between the two domains promotes attachment of the second motor domain. This mechanism allows skeletal muscle to resist external stretch without increasing the force per motor and provides an answer to the longstanding question of the functional role of the dimeric structure of muscle myosin.
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