[PDF][PDF] Myosin heads are displaced from actin filaments in the in situ beating rat heart in early diabetes

MJ Jenkins, JT Pearson, DO Schwenke, AJ Edgley… - Biophysical journal, 2013 - cell.com
MJ Jenkins, JT Pearson, DO Schwenke, AJ Edgley, T Sonobe, Y Fujii, H Ishibashi-Ueda…
Biophysical journal, 2013cell.com
Diabetes is independently associated with a specific cardiomyopathy, characterized by
impaired cardiac muscle relaxation and force development. Using synchrotron radiation
small-angle x-ray scattering, this study investigated in the in situ heart and in real-time
whether changes in cross-bridge disposition and myosin interfilament spacing underlie the
early development of diabetic cardiomyopathy. Experiments were conducted using
anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats 3 weeks after treatment with either vehicle (control) or …
Abstract
Diabetes is independently associated with a specific cardiomyopathy, characterized by impaired cardiac muscle relaxation and force development. Using synchrotron radiation small-angle x-ray scattering, this study investigated in the in situ heart and in real-time whether changes in cross-bridge disposition and myosin interfilament spacing underlie the early development of diabetic cardiomyopathy. Experiments were conducted using anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats 3 weeks after treatment with either vehicle (control) or streptozotocin (diabetic). Diffraction patterns were recorded during baseline and dobutamine infusions simultaneous with ventricular pressure-volumetry. From these diffraction patterns myosin mass transfer to actin filaments was assessed as the change in intensity ratio (I1,0/I1,1). In diabetic hearts cross-bridge disposition was most notably abnormal in the diastolic phase (p < 0.05) and to a lesser extent the systolic phase (p < 0.05). In diabetic rats only, there was a transmural gradient of contractile depression. Elevated diabetic end-diastolic intensity ratios were correlated with the suppression of diastolic function (p < 0.05). Furthermore, the expected increase in myosin head transfer by dobutamine was significantly blunted in diabetic animals (p < 0.05). Interfilament spacing did not differ between groups. We reveal that impaired cross-bridge disposition and radial transfer may thus underlie the early decline in ventricular function observed in diabetic cardiomyopathy.
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