Title
Mechanical fatigue in repetitively stretched single molecules of titin
Date Issued
01 January 2001
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of California
Publisher(s)
Biophysical Society
Abstract
Relaxed striated muscle cells exhibit mechanical fatigue when exposed to repeated stretch and release cycles. To understand the molecular basis of such mechanical fatigue, single molecules of the giant filamentous protein titin, which is the main determinant of sarcomeric elasticity, were repetitively stretched and released while their force response was characterized with optical tweezers. During repeated stretch-release cycles titin becomes mechanically worn out in a process we call molecular fatigue. The process is characterized by a progressive shift of the stretch-force curve toward increasing end-to-end lengths, indicating that repeated mechanical cycles increase titin's effective contour length. Molecular fatigue occurs only in a restricted force range (0-25 pN) during the initial part of the stretch half-cycle, whereas the rest of the force response is repeated from one mechanical cycle to the other. Protein-folding models fail to explain molecular fatigue on the basis of an incomplete refolding of titin's globular domains. Rather, the process apparently derives from the formation of labile nonspecific bonds cross-linking various sites along a pre-unfolded titin segment. Because titin's molecular fatigue occurs in a physiologically relevant force range, the process may play an important role in dynamically adjusting muscle's response to the recent history of mechanical perturbations.
Start page
852
End page
863
Volume
80
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biofísica
Biología celular, Microbiología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0035144607
PubMed ID
Source
Biophysical Journal
ISSN of the container
00063495
Sponsor(s)
This work was supported by grants from the Hungarian Science Foundation (OTKA F025353) and the Hungarian Ministry of Health (ETT T-06–021/97) to M.S.Z.K., National Institutes of Health Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (HL61497 and HL62881) to H.L.G., and by grants from the National Institutes of Health (GM-32543) and the National Science Foundation (MBC 9118482) to C.B. M.S.Z.K. is recipient of the Bolyai János Fellowship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and H.L.G. is an established investigator of the American Heart Association.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus