Troponin T (TnT) is a central player in the calcium regulation of actin thin filament function and is essential for the contraction of striated muscles. Three homologous genes have evolved in ...vertebrates to encode three muscle type-specific TnT isoforms: TNNT1 for slow skeletal muscle TnT, TNNT2 for cardiac muscle TnT, and TNNT3 for fast skeletal muscle TnT. Alternative splicing and posttranslational modifications confer additional structural and functional variations of TnT during development and muscle adaptation to various physiological and pathological conditions. This review focuses on the TnT isoform genes and their molecular evolution, alternative splicing, developmental regulation, structure–function relationships of TnT proteins, posttranslational modifications, and myopathic mutations and abnormal splicing. The goal is to provide a concise summary of the current knowledge and some perspectives for future research and translational applications.
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•Troponin T (TnT) is a regulator of striated muscle contraction.•3 Homologous genes have evolved in vertebrates encoding muscle type TnT isoforms.•Alternative splicing and posttranslational modifications add variations of TnT.•TnT gene expression is regulated during development and adaptations.•This review summarizes the current knowledge and perspectives of TnT research.
Calponin is an actin filament-associated regulatory protein expressed in smooth muscle and many types of non-muscle cells. Three homologous genes, CNN1, CNN2 and CNN3, encoding calponin isoforms 1, ...2, and 3, respectively, are present in vertebrate species. All three calponin isoforms are actin-binding proteins with functions in inhibiting actin-activated myosin ATPase and stabilizing the actin cytoskeleton, while each isoform executes different physiological roles based on their cell type-specific expressions. Calponin 1 is specifically expressed in smooth muscle cells and plays a role in fine-tuning smooth muscle contractility. Calponin 2 is expressed in both smooth muscle and non-muscle cells and regulates multiple actin cytoskeleton-based functions. Calponin 3 participates in actin cytoskeleton-based activities in embryonic development and myogenesis. Phosphorylation has been extensively studied for the regulation of calponin functions. Cytoskeleton tension regulates the transcription of CNN2 gene and the degradation of calponin 2 protein. This review summarizes our knowledge learned from studies over the past three decades, focusing on the evolutionary lineage of calponin isoform genes, their tissue- and cell type-specific expressions, structure–function relationships, and mechanoregulation.
The powered flight of animals requires efficient and sustainable contractions of the wing muscles of various flying species. Despite their high degree of phylogenetic divergence, flight muscles in ...insects and vertebrates are striated muscles with similarly specialized sarcomeric structure and basic mechanisms of contraction and relaxation. Comparative studies examining flight muscles together with other striated muscles can provide valuable insights into the fundamental mechanisms of muscle contraction and energetic efficiency. Here, we conducted a literature review and data mining to investigate the independent emergence and evolution of flight muscles in insects, birds, and bats, and the likely molecular basis of their contractile features and energetic efficiency. Bird and bat flight muscles have different metabolic rates that reflect differences in energetic efficiencies while having similar contractile machinery that is under the selection of similar natural environments. The significantly lower efficiency of insect flight muscles along with minimized energy expenditure in Ca
handling is discussed as a potential mechanism to increase the efficiency of mammalian striated muscles. A better understanding of the molecular evolution of myofilament proteins in the context of physiological functions of invertebrate and vertebrate flight muscles can help explore novel approaches to enhance the performance and efficiency of skeletal and cardiac muscles for the improvement of human health.
Troponin T (TnT) is the thin filament anchoring subunit of troponin complex and plays an organizer role in the Ca
2+
-regulation of striated muscle contraction. From an ancestral gene emerged ~ 700 ...million years ago in Bilateria, three homologous genes have evolved in vertebrates to encode muscle type-specific isoforms of TnT. Alternative splicing variants of TnT are present in vertebrate and invertebrate muscles to add functional diversity. While the C-terminal region of TnT is largely conserved, it contains an alternatively spliced segment emerged early in
C. elegans
, which has evolved into a pair of mutually exclusive exons in arthropods (10A and 10B of
Drosophila TpnT
gene) and vertebrates (16 and 17 of fast skeletal muscle
Tnnt3
gene). The C-terminal alternatively spliced segment of TnT interfaces with the other two subunits of troponin with functional significance. The vertebrate cardiac TnT gene that emerged from duplication of the fast TnT gene has eliminated this alternative splicing by the fixation of an exon 17-like constitutive exon, indicating a functional value in slower and rhythmic contractions. The vertebrate slow skeletal muscle TnT gene that emerged from duplication of the cardiac TnT gene has the exon 17-like structure conserved, indicating its further function in sustained and fatigue resistant contractions. This functionality-based evolution is consistent with the finding that exon 10B-encoded segment of
Drosophila
TnT homologous to the exon 17-encoded segment of vertebrate fast TnT is selectively expressed in insect heart and leg muscles. The evolution of the C-terminal variable region of TnT demonstrates a submolecular mechanism in modifying striated muscle contractility and for the treatment of muscle and heart diseases.
Ultracold atomic gases provide model systems in which to study many-body quantum physics. Recent experiments using Fermi gases have demonstrated a phase transition to a superfluid state with strong ...interparticle interactions. This system provides a realization of the 'BCS-BEC crossover' connecting the physics of Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) superconductivity with that of Bose-Einstein condensates (BECs). Although many aspects of this system have been investigated, it has not yet been possible to measure the single-particle excitation spectrum (a fundamental property directly predicted by many-body theories). Here we use photoemission spectroscopy to directly probe the elementary excitations and energy dispersion in a strongly interacting Fermi gas of 40K atoms. In the experiments, a radio-frequency photon ejects an atom from the strongly interacting system by means of a spin-flip transition to a weakly interacting state. We measure the occupied density of single-particle states at the cusp of the BCS-BEC crossover and on the BEC side of the crossover, and compare these results to that for a nearly ideal Fermi gas. We show that, near the critical temperature, the single-particle spectral function is dramatically altered in a way that is consistent with a large pairing gap. Our results probe the many-body physics in a way that could be compared to data for the high-transition-temperature superconductors. As in photoemission spectroscopy for electronic materials, our measurement technique for ultracold atomic gases directly probes low-energy excitations and thus can reveal excitation gaps and/or pseudogaps. Furthermore, this technique can provide an analogue of angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy for probing anisotropic systems, such as atoms in optical lattice potentials.
► Troponin T (TnT) is a central player in the Ca2+-regulation of muscle contraction. ► Four decades of work has learned much on TnT evolution, regulation and function. ► More future work is needed ...for the role of TnT in muscle function and adaptation.
Troponin-mediated Ca2+-regulation governs the actin-activated myosin motor function which powers striated (skeletal and cardiac) muscle contraction. This review focuses on the structure–function relationship of troponin T, one of the three protein subunits of the troponin complex. Molecular evolution, gene regulation, alternative RNA splicing, and posttranslational modifications of troponin T isoforms in skeletal and cardiac muscles are summarized with emphases on recent research progresses. The physiological and pathophysiological significances of the structural diversity and regulation of troponin T are discussed for impacts on striated muscle function and adaptation in health and diseases.
Abstract Arterial atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease. Macrophages play a major role in the pathogenesis and progression of atherosclerotic lesions. Modulation of macrophage function is a ...therapeutic target for the treatment of atherosclerosis. Calponin is an actin-filament-associated regulatory protein that inhibits the activity of myosin-ATPase and dynamics of the actin cytoskeleton. Encoded by the gene Cnn2 , calponin isoform 2 is expressed at significant levels in macrophages. Deletion of calponin 2 increases macrophage migration and phagocytosis. In the present study, we investigated the effect of deletion of calponin 2 in macrophages on the pathogenesis and development of atherosclerosis. The results showed that macrophages isolated from Cnn2 knockout mice ingested a similar level of acetylated low-density lipoprotein (LDL) to that of wild type (WT) macrophages but the resulting foam cells had significantly less hindered velocity of migration. Systemic or myeloid cell-specific Cnn2 knockouts effectively attenuated the development of arterial atherosclerosis lesions with less macrophage infiltration in apolipoprotein E knockout mice. Consistently, calponin 2-null macrophages produced less pro-inflammatory cytokines than that of WT macrophages, and the up-regulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines in foam cells was also attenuated by the deletion of calponin 2. Calponin 2-null macrophages and foam cells have significantly weakened cell adhesion, indicating a role of cytoskeleton regulation in macrophage functions and inflammatory responses, and a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of arterial atherosclerosis.
New Findings
What is the central question of this study?
Can frozen cardiac papillary muscles and cryosectioning be used to reliably obtain uniform cardiac muscle strips with high yields?
What is the ...main finding and its importance?
A new method was developed using frozen cardiac papillary muscles and cryosectioning to reliably obtain uniform cardiac muscle strips with high yields. Experimental results demonstrate that this new methodology significantly increases the efficiency and application of quantitative biomechanical studies using skinned muscle fibres with an additional advantage of no need for transferring live animals.
Skinned cardiac muscle preparations are widely used to study contractile function of myofilament proteins and pathophysiological changes. The current methods applied in these biomechanical studies include detergent permeabilization of freshly isolated papillary muscle, ventricular trabeculae, surgically dissected ventricular muscle strips, mechanically blended cardiac muscle bundles or myocytes, and enzymatically isolated single cardiomyocytes. To facilitate and expand the skinned cardiac muscle approach, we have developed an efficient and readily practical method for mechanical studies of skinned mouse cardiac papillary muscle strips prepared from cryosections. Longitudinal papillary muscle strips of 120–150 µm width cut from 35–70 µm‐thick cryosections are mounted to a force transducer and chemically skinned for the studies of force–pCa and sarcomere length–tension relationship and rate of tension redevelopment. In addition to more effective skinning and perfusion than with whole papillary muscle and much higher yield of useful preparations than that from trabeculae, this new methodology has two more major advantages. One is to allow for the use of frozen cardiac muscle in storage to maximize the value of muscle samples, facilitating resource sharing among research institutions without the need of transferring live animals or fresh biopsies. The other is that the integrity of the muscle strips is well preserved during the preparation and mechanical studies, allowing coupled characterization of myofilament proteins. The combined power of biomechanics and protein biochemistry can provide novel insights into integrative physiological and pathophysiological mechanisms of cardiac muscle contraction while the high yield of high‐quality muscle strips also provides an efficient platform for development of therapeutic reagents.
Abstract
We describe the natural history of 'Amish' nemaline myopathy (ANM), an infantile-onset, lethal disease linked to a pathogenic c.505G>T nonsense mutation of TNNT1, which encodes the slow ...fiber isoform of troponin T (TNNT1; a.k.a. TnT). The TNNT1 c.505G>T allele has a carrier frequency of 6.5% within Old Order Amish settlements of North America. We collected natural history data for 106 ANM patients born between 1923 and 2017. Over the last two decades, mean age of molecular diagnosis was 16 ± 27 days. TNNT1 c.505G>T homozygotes were normal weight at birth but failed to thrive by age 9 months. Presenting neonatal signs were axial hypotonia, hip and shoulder stiffness, and tremors, followed by progressive muscle weakness, atrophy and contractures. Affected children developed thoracic rigidity, pectus carinatum and restrictive lung disease during infancy, and all succumbed to respiratory failure by 6 years of age (median survival 18 months, range 0.2-66 months). Muscle histology from two affected children showed marked fiber size variation owing to both Type 1 myofiber smallness (hypotrophy) and Type 2 fiber hypertrophy, with evidence of nemaline rods, myofibrillar disarray and vacuolar pathology in both fiber types. The truncated slow TNNT1 (TnT) fragment (p.Glu180Ter) was undetectable in ANM muscle, reflecting its rapid proteolysis and clearance from sarcoplasm. Similar functional and histological phenotypes were observed in other human cohorts and two transgenic murine models (Tnnt1−/− and Tnnt1 c.505G>T). These findings have implications for emerging molecular therapies, including the suitably of TNNT1 gene replacement for newborns with ANM or other TNNT1-associated myopathies.
Little is known about the epidemiology of adult attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
To estimate the prevalence and correlates of DSM-IV adult ADHD in the World Health Organization World ...Mental Health Survey Initiative.
An ADHD screen was administered to respondents aged 18-44 years in ten countries in the Americas, Europe and the Middle East (n=11422). Masked clinical reappraisal interviews were administered to 154 US respondents to calibrate the screen. Multiple imputation was used to estimate prevalence and correlates based on the assumption of cross-national calibration comparability.
Estimates of ADHD prevalence averaged 3.4% (range 1.2-7.3%), with lower prevalence in lower-income countries (1.9%) compared with higher-income countries (4.2%). Adult ADHD often co-occurs with other DSM-IV disorders and is associated with considerable role disability. Few cases are treated for ADHD, but in many cases treatment is given for comorbid disorders.
Adult ADHD should be considered more seriously in future epidemiological and clinical studies than is currently the case.