Blebbistatin specifically inhibits actin-myosin interaction in mouse cardiac muscle

Y Dou, P Arlock, A Arner - American Journal of Physiology …, 2007 - journals.physiology.org
Y Dou, P Arlock, A Arner
American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 2007journals.physiology.org
Blebbistatin is a powerful inhibitor of actin-myosin interaction in isolated contractile proteins.
To examine whether blebbistatin acts in a similar manner in the organized contractile system
of striated muscle, the effects of blebbistatin on contraction of cardiac tissue from mouse
were studied. The contraction of paced intact papillary muscle preparations and shortening
of isolated cardiomyocytes were inhibited by blebbistatin with inhibitory constants in the
micromolar range (1.3–2.8 μM). The inhibition constants are similar to those previously …
Blebbistatin is a powerful inhibitor of actin-myosin interaction in isolated contractile proteins. To examine whether blebbistatin acts in a similar manner in the organized contractile system of striated muscle, the effects of blebbistatin on contraction of cardiac tissue from mouse were studied. The contraction of paced intact papillary muscle preparations and shortening of isolated cardiomyocytes were inhibited by blebbistatin with inhibitory constants in the micromolar range (1.3–2.8 μM). The inhibition constants are similar to those previously reported for isolated cardiac myosin subfragments showing that blebbistatin action is similar in filamentous myosin of the cardiac contractile apparatus and isolated proteins. The inhibition was not associated with alterations in action potential duration or decreased influx through L-type Ca2+ channels. Experiments on permeabilized cardiac muscle preparations showed that the inhibition was not due to alterations in Ca2+ sensitivity of the contractile filaments. The maximal shortening velocity was not affected by 1 μM blebbistatin. In conclusion, we show that blebbistatin is an inhibitor of the actin-myosin interaction in the organized contractile system of cardiac muscle and that its action is not due to effects on the Ca2+ influx and activation systems.
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