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Vol. 19, Issue 2, 553-562, February 2008
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*Department of Biology and Heart Institute, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182-4614;
Development and Aging Program, Burnham Institute for Medical Research, La Jolla, CA 92037; and
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182-1030
Submitted September 12, 2007;
Revised November 6, 2007;
Accepted November 16, 2007
Monitoring Editor: Thomas Pollard
Striated muscle myosin is a multidomain ATP-dependent molecular motor. Alterations to various domains affect the chemomechanical properties of the motor, and they are associated with skeletal and cardiac myopathies. The myosin transducer domain is located near the nucleotide-binding site. Here, we helped define the role of the transducer by using an integrative approach to study how Drosophila melanogaster transducer mutations D45 and Mhc5 affect myosin function and skeletal and cardiac muscle structure and performance. We found D45 (A261T) myosin has depressed ATPase activity and in vitro actin motility, whereas Mhc5 (G200D) myosin has these properties enhanced. Depressed D45 myosin activity protects against age-associated dysfunction in metabolically demanding skeletal muscles. In contrast, enhanced Mhc5 myosin function allows normal skeletal myofibril assembly, but it induces degradation of the myofibrillar apparatus, probably as a result of contractile disinhibition. Analysis of beating hearts demonstrates depressed motor function evokes a dilatory response, similar to that seen with vertebrate dilated cardiomyopathy myosin mutations, and it disrupts contractile rhythmicity. Enhanced myosin performance generates a phenotype apparently analogous to that of human restrictive cardiomyopathy, possibly indicating myosin-based origins for the disease. The D45 and Mhc5 mutations illustrate the transducer's role in influencing the chemomechanical properties of myosin and produce unique pathologies in distinct muscles. Our data suggest Drosophila is a valuable system for identifying and modeling mutations analogous to those associated with specific human muscle disorders.
Present address: The Scripps Research Institute, Kellogg School of Science and Technology, 10550 N. Torrey Pines Rd., TPC-19, La Jolla, CA 92037.
Address correspondence to: Sanford I. Bernstein (sbernst{at}sciences.sdsu.edu) or Karen Ocorr (kocorr{at}burnham.org)
Abbreviations used: AI, arrythmicity index; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; DI, diastolic interval; FI, flight index; HP, heart period; IFI, indirect flight isoform; IFM, indirect flight muscle; MHC, myosin heavy chain; RCM, restrictive cardiomyopathy; SI, systolic interval; Tn, troponin.