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A high-throughput fluorescence lifetime-based assay to detect binding of myosin-binding protein C to F-actin

Authors :
Kellan M. Bortz
Brett A. Colson
Thomas A. Bunch
Victoria C. Lepak
Source :
The Journal of General Physiology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Bunch et al. describe a new assay to rapidly evaluate binding of cMyBP-C to F-actin (with or without tropomyosin) in solution. Changes in labeled actin fluorescence lifetime due to cMyBP-C phosphorylation and/or HCM mutations were consistent with measurements obtained using cosedimentation assays.<br />Binding properties of actin-binding proteins are typically evaluated by cosedimentation assays. However, this method is time-consuming, involves multiple steps, and has a limited throughput. These shortcomings preclude its use in screening for drugs that modulate actin-binding proteins relevant to human disease. To develop a simple, quantitative, and scalable F-actin–binding assay, we attached fluorescent probes to actin's Cys-374 and assessed changes in fluorescence lifetime upon binding to the N-terminal region (domains C0–C2) of human cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C). The lifetime of all five probes tested decreased upon incubation with cMyBP-C C0–C2, as measured by time-resolved fluorescence (TR-F), with IAEDANS being the most sensitive probe that yielded the smallest errors. The TR-F assay was compared with cosedimentation to evaluate in vitro changes in binding to actin and actin–tropomyosin arising from cMyBP-C mutations associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and tropomyosin binding. Lifetime changes of labeled actin with added C0–C2 were consistent with cosedimentation results. The HCM mutation L352P was confirmed to enhance actin binding, whereas PKA phosphorylation reduced binding. The HCM mutation R282W, predicted to disrupt a PKA recognition sequence, led to deficits in C0–C2 phosphorylation and altered binding. Lastly, C0–C2 binding was found to be enhanced by tropomyosin and binding capacity to be altered by mutations in a tropomyosin-binding region. These findings suggest that the TR-F assay is suitable for rapidly and accurately determining quantitative binding and for screening physiological conditions and compounds that affect cMyBP-C binding to F-actin for therapeutic discovery.

Details

ISSN :
15407748 and 00221295
Volume :
153
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of General Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....69db6f627106327e8d8b3794b1721358
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.202012707