Publication | Open Access
Resolving titin’s lifecycle and the spatial organization of protein turnover in mouse cardiomyocytes
51
Citations
30
References
2019
Year
Cardiac MuscleEngineeringProtein TurnoverCytoskeletonSpatial OrganizationCardiac Protein HomeostasisCellular PhysiologyCell SignalingTitin IntegrationCell PhysiologyMechanobiologyCardiomyopathyMolecular PhysiologyMouse CardiomyocytesMorphogenesisCell BiologyTitin MrnaSignal TransductionDevelopmental BiologyCell-matrix InteractionCellular StructureCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicine
Cardiac protein homeostasis, sarcomere assembly, and integration of titin as the sarcomeric backbone are tightly regulated to facilitate adaptation and repair. Very little is known on how the >3-MDa titin protein is synthesized, moved, inserted into sarcomeres, detached, and degraded. Here, we generated a bifluorescently labeled knockin mouse to simultaneously visualize both ends of the molecule and follow titin's life cycle in vivo. We find titin mRNA, protein synthesis and degradation compartmentalized toward the Z-disk in adult, but not embryonic cardiomyocytes. Originating at the Z-disk, titin contributes to a soluble protein pool (>15% of total titin) before it is integrated into the sarcomere lattice. Titin integration, disintegration, and reintegration are stochastic and do not proceed sequentially from Z-disk to M-band, as suggested previously. Exchange between soluble and integrated titin depends on titin protein composition and differs between individual cardiomyocytes. Thus, titin dynamics facilitate embryonic vs. adult sarcomere remodeling with implications for cardiac development and disease.
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