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Series of Exon-Skipping Events in the Elastic Spring Region of Titin as the Structural Basis for Myofibrillar Elastic Diversity

Authors :
Henk Granzier
Karoly Trombitás
Alexandra Freiburg
Olivier Cazorla
Thomas Centner
Bernhard Kolmerer
Francoise Fougerousse
Christian Witt
Jaques S. Beckmann
Siegfried Labeit
Carol C. Gregorio
Wolfgang Hell
Physiologie & médecine expérimentale du Cœur et des Muscles [U 1046] (PhyMedExp)
Université de Montpellier (UM)-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Généthon
Source :
Circulation Research, Circulation Research, American Heart Association, 2000, 86 (11), pp.1114-1121. ⟨10.1161/01.RES.86.11.1114⟩, ResearcherID
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2000.

Abstract

Abstract —Titins are megadalton-sized filamentous polypeptides of vertebrate striated muscle. The I-band region of titin underlies the myofibrillar passive tension response to stretch. Here, we show how titins with highly diverse I-band structures and elastic properties are expressed from a single gene. The differentially expressed tandem-Ig, PEVK, and N2B spring elements of titin are coded by 158 exons, which are contained within a 106-kb genomic segment and are all subject to tissue-specific skipping events. In ventricular heart muscle, exons 101 kb apart are joined, leading to the exclusion of 155 exons and the expression of a 2.97-MDa cardiac titin N2B isoform. The atria of mammalian hearts also express larger titins by the exclusion of 90 to 100 exons (cardiac N2BA titin with 3.3 MDa). In the soleus and psoas skeletal muscles, different exon-skipping pathways produce titin transcripts that code for 3.7- and 3.35-MDa titin isoforms, respectively. Mechanical and structural studies indicate that the exon-skipping pathways modulate the fractional extensions of the tandem Ig and PEVK segments, thereby influencing myofibrillar elasticity. Within the mammalian heart, expression of different levels of N2B and N2BA titins likely contributes to the elastic diversity of atrial and ventricular myofibrils.

Details

ISSN :
15244571 and 00097330
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0f774104b0573007786f8d23672ebd59