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Nanomechanical Phenotypes in Cardiac Myosin-Binding Protein C Mutants That Cause Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

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posted on 2021-06-01, 16:05 authored by Carmen Suay-Corredera, Maria Rosaria Pricolo, Diana Velázquez-Carreras, Divya Pathak, Neha Nandwani, Carolina Pimenta-Lopes, David Sánchez-Ortiz, Iñigo Urrutia-Irazabal, Silvia Vilches, Fernando Dominguez, Giulia Frisso, Lorenzo Monserrat, Pablo García-Pavía, David de Sancho, James A. Spudich, Kathleen M. Ruppel, Elías Herrero-Galán, Jorge Alegre-Cebollada
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a disease of the myocardium caused by mutations in sarcomeric proteins with mechanical roles, such as the molecular motor myosin. Around half of the HCM-causing genetic variants target contraction modulator cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyBP-C), although the underlying pathogenic mechanisms remain unclear since many of these mutations cause no alterations in protein structure and stability. As an alternative pathomechanism, here we have examined whether pathogenic mutations perturb the nanomechanics of cMyBP-C, which would compromise its modulatory mechanical tethers across sliding actomyosin filaments. Using single-molecule atomic force spectroscopy, we have quantified mechanical folding and unfolding transitions in cMyBP-C domains targeted by HCM mutations that do not induce RNA splicing alterations or protein thermodynamic destabilization. Our results show that domains containing mutation R495W are mechanically weaker than wild-type at forces below 40 pN and that R502Q mutant domains fold faster than wild-type. None of these alterations are found in control, nonpathogenic variants, suggesting that nanomechanical phenotypes induced by pathogenic cMyBP-C mutations contribute to HCM development. We propose that mutation-induced nanomechanical alterations may be common in mechanical proteins involved in human pathologies.

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