Direct regulation of striated muscle myosins by nitric oxide and endogenous nitrosothiols
AM Evangelista, VS Rao, AR Filo, NV Marozkina… - PloS one, 2010 - journals.plos.org
PloS one, 2010•journals.plos.org
Background Nitric oxide (NO) has long been recognized to affect muscle contraction, both
through activation of guanylyl cyclase and through modification of cysteines in proteins to
yield S-nitrosothiols. While NO affects the contractile apparatus directly, the identities of the
target myofibrillar proteins remain unknown. Here we report that nitrogen oxides directly
regulate striated muscle myosins. Principal Findings Exposure of skeletal and cardiac
myosins to physiological concentrations of nitrogen oxides, including the endogenous …
through activation of guanylyl cyclase and through modification of cysteines in proteins to
yield S-nitrosothiols. While NO affects the contractile apparatus directly, the identities of the
target myofibrillar proteins remain unknown. Here we report that nitrogen oxides directly
regulate striated muscle myosins. Principal Findings Exposure of skeletal and cardiac
myosins to physiological concentrations of nitrogen oxides, including the endogenous …
Background
Nitric oxide (NO) has long been recognized to affect muscle contraction , both through activation of guanylyl cyclase and through modification of cysteines in proteins to yield S-nitrosothiols. While NO affects the contractile apparatus directly, the identities of the target myofibrillar proteins remain unknown. Here we report that nitrogen oxides directly regulate striated muscle myosins.
Principal Findings
Exposure of skeletal and cardiac myosins to physiological concentrations of nitrogen oxides, including the endogenous nitrosothiol S-nitroso-L-cysteine, reduced the velocity of actin filaments over myosin in a dose-dependent and oxygen-dependent manner, caused a doubling of force as measured in a laser trap transducer, and caused S-nitrosylation of cysteines in the myosin heavy chain. These biomechanical effects were not observed in response to S-nitroso-D-cysteine, demonstrating specificity for the naturally occurring isomer. Both myosin heavy chain isoforms in rats and cardiac myosin heavy chain from human were S-nitrosylated in vivo.
Significance
These data show that nitrosylation signaling acts as a molecular “gear shift” for myosin—an altogether novel mechanism by which striated muscle and cellular biomechanics may be regulated.
