Can the binding of Ca2+ to two regulatory sites on troponin C determine the steep pCa/tension relationship of skeletal muscle?
Author(s) -
Philip W. Brandt,
Robert N. Cox,
Masataka Kawai
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.77.8.4717
Subject(s) - troponin c , myofilament , tension (geology) , chemistry , biophysics , saturation vapor curve , troponin , muscle contraction , hill differential equation , skeletal muscle , biochemistry , thermodynamics , biology , anatomy , actin , medicine , enzyme , mathematics , physics , mathematical analysis , exact differential equation , myocardial infarction , first order partial differential equation , partial differential equation , compression (physics)
The relationship between tension and Ca2+ concentration in single skinned muscle fibers has been determined with a high density of experimental points and the data have been fitted by a least squares method to the Hill equation. We find that the mean Hill coefficient for the slope of the tension/Ca2+ relationship is between 5 and 6, and the pKd is about 5.9. Because there are four Ca2+ binding sites on troponin C, and only two of these regulate hydrolysis of MgATP, we conclude that the regulation of tension by Ca2+ binding is greatly modified by other factors. One important factor is the time required for a cross-bridge to complete a cycle once initiated, relative to the time Ca2+ remains bound to troponin C. The pCa/tension relationship will shift to higher pCa values as the ratio of cross-bridge cycle time to the Ca2+ bound time increases. For example, the pCa/tension curve may progressively shift to the left with increase in tension because strain in the myofilament lattice progressively increases the cycle time. This left shift will produce a pCa/tension relationship that is steeper than the actual Ca2+ binding curve. The anticipated shift of the pCa/tension curve with cycle time also bears on interpretations of earlier experiments on the "active state" and on the effects of Ca2+ on the maximal velocity of shortening.
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