| Effects of Sustained Length-Dependent Activation on In Situ Cross-Bridge Dynamics in Rat Hearts Biophysical Journal, Volume 93, Issue 12, 15 December 2007, Pages 4319-4329 James T. Pearson, Mikiyasu Shirai, Hirotsugu Tsuchimochi, Daryl O. Schwenke, Takayuki Ishida, Kenji Kangawa, Hiroyuki Suga and Naoto Yagi Abstract The cellular basis of the length-dependent increases in contractile force in the beating heart has remained unclear. Our aim was to investigate whether length-dependent mediated increases in contractile force are correlated with myosin head proximity to actin filaments, and presumably the number of cross-bridges activated during a contraction. We therefore employed x-ray diffraction analyses of beat-to-beat contractions in spontaneously beating rat hearts under open-chest conditions simultaneous with recordings of left ventricle (LV) pressure-volume. Regional x-ray diffraction patterns were recorded from the anterior LV free wall under steady-state contractions and during acute volume loading (intravenous lactate Ringers infusion at 60ml/h, <5min duration) to determine the change in intensity ratio (/) and myosin interfilament spacing (). We found no significant change in end-diastolic (ED) intensity ratio, indicating that the proportion of myosin heads in proximity to actin was unchanged by fiber stretching. Intensity ratio decreased significantly more during the isovolumetric contraction phase during volume loading than under baseline contractions. A significant systolic increase in myosin head proximity to actin filaments correlated with the maximum rate of pressure increase. Hence, a reduction in interfilament spacing at end-diastole (∼0.5nm) during stretch increased the proportion of cross-bridges activated. Furthermore, our recordings suggest that expansion was inversely related to LV volume but was restricted during contraction and sarcomere shortening to values smaller than the maximum during isovolumetric relaxation. Since ventricular volume, and presumably sarcomere length, was found to be directly related to interfilament spacing, these findings support a role for interfilament spacing in modulating cross-bridge formation and force developed before shortening. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (437 kb) |
| Cycling Cross-Bridges Increase Myocardial Stiffness at Submaximal Levels of Ca Activation Biophysical Journal, Volume 84, Issue 6, 1 June 2003, Pages 3807-3815 Kenneth S. Campbell, Jitandrakumar R. Patel and Richard L. Moss Abstract Permeabilized multicellular preparations of canine myocardium were subjected to controlled length changes to investigate the extent to which cross-bridges augment passive stiffness components in myocardium at low levels of Ca activation. When the preparations were immersed in pCa 9.0 solution (negligible free [Ca]) they behaved as simple elastic systems (i.e., tension increased proportionately with length). In contrast, when the muscles were stretched in Ca activating solutions, tension rose much more rapidly during the initial phase of the movement than thereafter. Several lines of evidence suggest that the nonlinear response represents the displacement of populations of cycling cross-bridges that are perturbed by interfilamentary movement and take some time to recover. 1), The stiffness of the initial phase increased proportionately with the level of Ca activation. 2), The magnitude of the short-range response increased with stretch velocity. 3), The initial response was reversibly reduced by 5-mM 2,3-butanedione monoxime, a known cross-bridge inhibitor. The initial stiffness of the passive elastic (pCa 9.0) response was equivalent to the Ca dependent component at 2% (pCa ∼ 6.2) of the maximal (pCa 4.5) level. These results suggest that cross-bridges may significantly affect diastolic chamber stiffness. Abstract | Full Text | PDF (637 kb) |
| Cardiac Muscle & Regulatory Proteins - I Biophysical Journal, Volume 94, Issue , 1 February 2008, Pages 481-493 Full Text | PDF (230 kb) |
Copyright © 1979 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 28, Issue 1, 143-166, 1 October 1979
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(79)85165-6
Research Article
T.S. Feit
A model for left ventricular diastolic mechanics is formulated that takes into account noneligible wall thickness, incompressibility, finite deformation, nonlinear elastic effects, and the known fiber architecture of the ventricular wall. The model consists of a hollow cylindrical mass of muscle bound between two plates of negligible mass. The wall contains fiber elements that follow a helical course and carry only axial tension. The fiber angle (i.e., helical pitch) is constant along the length of each fiber but varies through the wall in accordance with the known distribution of fiber orientations in the canine left ventricle. To simplify the analysis and reduce the number of degrees of freedom, the anatomic distribution of fiber orientations is divided into a clockwise and counterclockwise system. The reference configuration for the model corresponds to a state in which, by hypothesis, the transmural pressure gradient is zero, the tension is zero for all fibers across the wall, and all fibers are assumed to have a sarcomere length of 1.9 micrometer. This choice of reference configuration is based on the empirical evidence that canine ventricles, fixed in a state of zero transmural pressure gradient and dissected, demonstrate sarcomere lengths between 1.9 and 2.0 micrometer in inner, middle, and outer wall layers, while isolated ventricular muscle bundles are observed to have zero resting tension when the sarcomere length ranges from 1.9 to 2.0 micrometer. An equation representing the global condition for equilibrium is derived and solved numerically. It is found that the model's pressure-volume relation is representative of diastolic filling in vivo over a wide range of filling pressures, and the calculated midwall sarcomere lengths in the model compare favorably with published experimental data. Subendocardial fibers are stretched beyond Lmax even at low filling pressures, i.e., 5 mm Hg, while fibers located between 60–80% of wall thickness extend minimally between 5 and 12 mm Hg. The hydrostatic pressure field within the wall is highly nonlinear. The pressure rises steeply in the subendocardial layers so that the net gain in pressure in the inner third of the wall is 85% of the filling pressure. It is demonstrated that these results are independent of heart size for a family of heart models that are scale models of each other. They are, however, critically dependent on the existence of longitudinally oriented fibers in the endocardial and epicardial regions of heart wall.