4.7 Article

A kinetic model that explains the effect of inorganic phosphate on the mechanics and energetics of isometric contraction of fast skeletal muscle

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1498

Keywords

chemo-mechanical cycle in muscle; myosin-actin ATPase; skinned fibre mechanochemistry; kinetic model of myosin motor

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 AR049033]
  2. Ministero dell'Universita e della Ricerca (MIUR-COFIN 2006))
  3. Istituto di Tecnologie Biomediche (ITB-CNR)
  4. Ministero del Lavoro, della Salute e delle Politiche Sociali [RF-MUL-2007-666195]

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A conventional five-step chemo-mechanical cycle of the myosin-actin ATPase reaction, which implies myosin detachment from actin upon release of hydrolysis products (ADP and phosphate, Pi) and binding of a new ATP molecule, is able to fit the [Pi] dependence of the force and number of myosin motors during isometric contraction of skeletal muscle. However, this scheme is not able to explain why the isometric ATPase rate of fast skeletal muscle is decreased by an increase in [Pi] much less than the number of motors. The question can be solved assuming the presence of a branch in the cycle: in isometric contraction, when the force generation process by the myosin motor is biased at the start of the working stroke, the motor can detach at an early stage of the ATPase cycle, with Pi still bound to its catalytic site, and then rapidly release the hydrolysis products and bind another ATP. In this way, the model predicts that in fast skeletal muscle the energetic cost of isometric contraction increases with [Pi]. The large dissociation constant of the product release in the branched pathway allows the isometric myosin-actin reaction to fit the equilibrium constant of the ATPase.

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