Effects of Three Cardiomyopathic-Causing Mutations (D230N, D84N, and E62Q) on the Structure and Flexibility of α-Tropomyosin

Cardiac contraction at the level of the sarcomere is regulated by the thin filament (TF) composed of actin, alpha tropomyosin (TPM), and the troponin (Tn) complex (cTnT: cTnC: cTnI). The "gate-keeper" protein, α-TPM, is a highly conserved α-helical, coiled-coil dimer that spans actin and r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Holeman, Teryn A.
Other Authors: Tardiff, Jil C.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/624101
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/624101
Description
Summary:Cardiac contraction at the level of the sarcomere is regulated by the thin filament (TF) composed of actin, alpha tropomyosin (TPM), and the troponin (Tn) complex (cTnT: cTnC: cTnI). The "gate-keeper" protein, α-TPM, is a highly conserved α-helical, coiled-coil dimer that spans actin and regulates myosin-actin interactions. The N-terminus of one α-TPM dimer inter-digitates with the C-terminus of the adjacent dimer in a head-to-tail fashion forming the flexible and cooperative TPM-overlap that is necessary for myofilament activation. Two dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) causing mutations in TPM (D84N and D230N) and one hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) causing mutation (E62Q), all identified in large, unrelated, multigenerational families, were utilized to study how primary alterations in protein structure cause functional deficits. We hypothesize that structural changes from a single point mutation propagate along the -helical coiled-coil of TPM, thus affecting its regulatory function. Structural effects of the mutations studied via differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) on TPM alone revealed significant changes in the thermal unfolding temperatures of both the C- and N-termini for all mutants compared to WT, indicating that mutational effects propagate to both ends of TPM, thus affecting the overlap region. Although, of note, the proximal termini to the mutation has shown more significant structural changes compared to WT. DSC analysis on fully reconstituted TF’s (Tn:TPM:Actin) revealed effects on the TPM-Actin cooperativity of activation, affecting interaction strength (thermal stability), and the rigidity of TPM moving along actin (FWHM). To characterize the resultant functional effect of these discrete changes in thermal stability and TPM rigidity, ATPase assays were used to measure actomyosin activation in the presence and absence of Ca2+. Together, these data will provide a molecular level understanding of the structural and functional deficits caused by these mutations to help elucidate the mechanisms leading to disease.