The Positively Charged C-Terminal Region of Human Skeletal Troponin T Retards Activation and Decreases Calcium Sensitivity

Alfredo Jesús López Dávila(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Li Zhu(East Carolina University), Leon Fritz(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Theresia Kraft(Medizinische Hochschule Hannover), Joseph M. Chalovich(East Carolina University)
Biochemistry
October 19, 2020
Cited by 15

Abstract

Calcium binding to troponin C (TnC) activates striated muscle contraction by removing TnI (troponin I) from its inhibitory site on actin. Troponin T (TnT) links TnI with tropomyosin, causing tropomyosin to move from an inhibitory position on actin to an activating position. Positive charges within the C-terminal region of human cardiac TnT limit Ca2+ activation. We now show that the positively charged region of TnT has an even larger impact on skeletal muscle regulation. We prepared one variant of human skeletal TnT that had the C-terminal 16 residues truncated (Δ16) and another with an added C-terminal Cys residue and Ala substituted for the last 6 basic residues (251C-HAHA). Both mutants reduced (based on S1 binding kinetics) or eliminated (based on acrylodan-tropomyosin fluorescence) the first inactive state of actin at <10 nM free Ca2+. 251C-HAHA-TnT and Δ16-TnT mutants greatly increased ATPase activation at 0.2 mM Ca2+, even without high-affinity cross-bridge binding. They also shifted the force–pCa curve of muscle fibers to lower Ca2+ by 0.8–1.2 pCa units (the larger shift for 251C-HAHA-TnT). Shifts in force–pCa were maintained in the presence of para-aminoblebbistatin. The effects of modification of the C-terminal region of TnT on the kinetics of S1 binding to actin were somewhat different from those observed earlier with the cardiac analogue. In general, the C-terminal region of human skeletal TnT is critical to regulation, just as it is in the cardiac system, and is a potential target for modulating activity.


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