Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 289, Issue 8, 21 February 2014, Pages 5158-5167
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Molecular Bases of Disease
The Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Myosin Mutation R453C Alters ATP Binding and Hydrolysis of Human Cardiac β-Myosin*

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The human hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation R453C results in one of the more severe forms of the myopathy. Arg-453 is found in a conserved surface loop of the upper 50-kDa domain of the myosin motor domain and lies between the nucleotide binding pocket and the actin binding site. It connects to the cardiomyopathy loop via a long α-helix, helix O, and to Switch-2 via the fifth strand of the central β-sheet. The mutation is, therefore, in a position to perturb a wide range of myosin molecular activities. We report here the first detailed biochemical kinetic analysis of the motor domain of the human β-cardiac myosin carrying the R453C mutation. A recent report of the same mutation (Sommese, R. F., Sung, J., Nag, S., Sutton, S., Deacon, J. C., Choe, E., Leinwand, L. A., Ruppel, K., and Spudich, J. A. (2013) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 110, 12607–12612) found reduced ATPase and in vitro motility but increased force production using an optical trap. Surprisingly, our results show that the mutation alters few biochemical kinetic parameters significantly. The exceptions are the rate constants for ATP binding to the motor domain (reduced by 35%) and the ATP hydrolysis step/recovery stroke (slowed 3-fold), which could be the rate-limiting step for the ATPase cycle. Effects of the mutation on the recovery stroke are consistent with a perturbation of Switch-2 closure, which is required for the recovery stroke and the subsequent ATP hydrolysis.

Actin
Cardiac Muscle
Cardiomyopathy
Fluorescence
Kinetics
Myosin
Homology Models
Protein Structure-Function
Sequence Alignment

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*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants T32 GM65013 (University of Colorado Molecular Biophysics Training Grant; to J. D.) and GM29090 (to L. A. L.). This work was also supported by Wellcome Trust Program Grant 085309 (to M. A. G.).

This article contains supplemental Figs. S1–S4.

1

Present address: Biomolecular Research Group, Department of Geographical and Life Sciences, Canterbury Christ Church University, Canterbury CT1 1QU, UK.

2

Present address: Dept. of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520.