Light chain 2 profile and activity of human ventricular myosin during dilated cardiomyopathy. Identification of a causal agent for impaired myocardial function.

SS Margossian, HD White, JB Caulfield, P Norton… - Circulation, 1992 - Am Heart Assoc
SS Margossian, HD White, JB Caulfield, P Norton, S Taylor, HS Slayter
Circulation, 1992Am Heart Assoc
BACKGROUND A number of parameters reflecting the effects of idiopathic dilated
cardiomyopathy (IDC) on the structure and function of myosin from the human myocardium
were analyzed. METHODS AND RESULTS The content of the regulatory light chain, LC2,
was reduced in myopathic heart myosin in contrast to the controls in which it was present in
stoichiometric amounts relative to the essential light chain, LC1. In IDC hearts, the absence
or significant reduction in amount of LC2 was related to the presence of an active protease …
BACKGROUND
A number of parameters reflecting the effects of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC) on the structure and function of myosin from the human myocardium were analyzed.
METHODS AND RESULTS
The content of the regulatory light chain, LC2, was reduced in myopathic heart myosin in contrast to the controls in which it was present in stoichiometric amounts relative to the essential light chain, LC1. In IDC hearts, the absence or significant reduction in amount of LC2 was related to the presence of an active protease, which was isolated and purified about 130-fold. The protease exhibited a significant degree of specificity: It cleaved LC2 almost totally (but not the heavy chains) in human control heart myosin but only partially cleaved LC2 in canine heart or in rabbit skeletal muscle myosins. The protease was present at a very low level or was inactive in control heart tissue. When the LC1/LC2 molar ratio was calculated, it was found to be 1:1.0 in control heart myosin and remained constant in various samples analyzed, whereas in myopathic myosin from different individuals, this ratio varied from 1:0.1 to 1:0.69. The rates of ATP binding to control and myopathic myosins were similar, whereas the Vm of actin-activated ATPase of myopathic myosin was about 25% less than that of the control. However, ATP binding and its hydrolysis by control S1, i.e., the myosin head, were faster by a factor of 2 than that of the myopathic S1. In addition, control myosin synthetic thick filament length as well as turbidity in solution, measured by light scattering, were twice as large as those of the myopathic heart myosin. These effects induced by myopathy in both filament assembly and turbidity were reversed upon reassociation of IDC myosin with LC2.
CONCLUSIONS
The changes in myosin structure and function were linked to a protease-mediated cleavage of LC2 in myosin; a possible role for the protease in the degenerative effects of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy is thus defined.
Am Heart Assoc