: Myosin II is the muscle molecular motor that works in two bipolar arrays in each thick filament of the striated (skeletal and cardiac) muscle, converting the chemical energy into steady force and shortening by cyclic ATP-driven interactions with the nearby actin filaments. Different isoforms of the myosin motor in the skeletal muscles account for the different functional requirements of the slow muscles (primarily responsible for the posture) and fast muscles (responsible for voluntary movements). To clarify the molecular basis of the differences, here the isoform-dependent mechanokinetic parameters underpinning the force of slow and fast muscles are defined with a unidimensional synthetic nanomachine powered by pure myosin isoforms from either slow or fast rabbit skeletal muscle. Data fitting with a stochastic model provides a self-consistent estimate of all the mechanokinetic properties of the motor ensemble including the motor force, the fraction of actin-attached motors and the rate of transition through the attachment-detachment cycle. The achievements in this paper set the stage for any future study on the emergent mechanokinetic properties of an ensemble of myosin molecules either engineered or purified from mutant animal models or human biopsies.

Force and kinetics of fast and slow muscle myosin determined with a synthetic sarcomere–like nanomachine / Buonfiglio, Valentina; Pertici, Irene; Marcello, Matteo; Morotti, Ilaria; Caremani, Marco; Reconditi, Massimo; Linari, Marco; Fanelli, Duccio; Lombardi, Vincenzo; Bianco, Pasquale. - In: COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY. - ISSN 2399-3642. - ELETTRONICO. - 7:(2024), pp. 361.0-361.0. [10.1038/s42003-024-06033-8]

Force and kinetics of fast and slow muscle myosin determined with a synthetic sarcomere–like nanomachine

Buonfiglio, Valentina;Pertici, Irene;Marcello, Matteo;Morotti, Ilaria;Caremani, Marco;Reconditi, Massimo;Linari, Marco;Fanelli, Duccio
;
Lombardi, Vincenzo
;
Bianco, Pasquale
2024

Abstract

: Myosin II is the muscle molecular motor that works in two bipolar arrays in each thick filament of the striated (skeletal and cardiac) muscle, converting the chemical energy into steady force and shortening by cyclic ATP-driven interactions with the nearby actin filaments. Different isoforms of the myosin motor in the skeletal muscles account for the different functional requirements of the slow muscles (primarily responsible for the posture) and fast muscles (responsible for voluntary movements). To clarify the molecular basis of the differences, here the isoform-dependent mechanokinetic parameters underpinning the force of slow and fast muscles are defined with a unidimensional synthetic nanomachine powered by pure myosin isoforms from either slow or fast rabbit skeletal muscle. Data fitting with a stochastic model provides a self-consistent estimate of all the mechanokinetic properties of the motor ensemble including the motor force, the fraction of actin-attached motors and the rate of transition through the attachment-detachment cycle. The achievements in this paper set the stage for any future study on the emergent mechanokinetic properties of an ensemble of myosin molecules either engineered or purified from mutant animal models or human biopsies.
2024
7
0
0
Buonfiglio, Valentina; Pertici, Irene; Marcello, Matteo; Morotti, Ilaria; Caremani, Marco; Reconditi, Massimo; Linari, Marco; Fanelli, Duccio; Lombardi, Vincenzo; Bianco, Pasquale
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1354091
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact