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      A myopathy-linked tropomyosin mutation severely alters thin filament conformational changes during activation.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Actin Cytoskeleton, chemistry, metabolism, Humans, Muscular Diseases, genetics, Mutation, Stress, Mechanical, Tropomyosin, X-Ray Diffraction

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          Abstract

          Human point mutations in beta- and gamma-tropomyosin induce contractile deregulation, skeletal muscle weakness, and congenital myopathies. The aim of the present study was to elucidate the hitherto unknown underlying molecular mechanisms. Hence, we recorded and analyzed the X-ray diffraction patterns of human membrane-permeabilized muscle cells expressing a particular beta-tropomyosin mutation (R133W) associated with a loss in cell force production, in vivo muscle weakness, and distal arthrogryposis. Upon addition of calcium, we notably observed less intensified changes, compared with controls, (i) in the second (1/19 nm(-1)), sixth (1/5.9 nm(-1)), and seventh (1/5.1 nm(-1)) actin layer lines of cells set at a sarcomere length, allowing an optimal thin-thick filament overlap; and (ii) in the second actin layer line of overstretched cells. Collectively, these results directly prove that during activation, switching of a positive to a neutral charge at position 133 in the protein partially hinders both calcium- and myosin-induced tropomyosin movement over the thin filament, blocking actin conformational changes and consequently decreasing the number of cross-bridges and subsequent force production.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          20457903
          2906900
          10.1073/pnas.1001733107

          Chemistry
          Actin Cytoskeleton,chemistry,metabolism,Humans,Muscular Diseases,genetics,Mutation,Stress, Mechanical,Tropomyosin,X-Ray Diffraction

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