Mechanical coordination in motor ensembles revealed using engineered artificial myosin filaments

R. F. Hariadi, R. F. Sommese, A. S. Adhikari, R. E. Taylor, S. Sutton, J. A. Spudich, S. Sivaramakrishnan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

55 Scopus citations

Abstract

The sarcomere of muscle is composed of tens of thousands of myosin motors that self-assemble into thick filaments and interact with surrounding actin-based thin filaments in a dense, near-crystalline hexagonal lattice. Together, these actin-myosin interactions enable large-scale movement and force generation, two primary attributes of muscle. Research on isolated fibres has provided considerable insight into the collective properties of muscle, but how actin-myosin interactions are coordinated in an ensemble remains poorly understood. Here, we show that artificial myosin filaments, engineered using a DNA nanotube scaffold, provide precise control over motor number, type and spacing. Using both dimeric myosin V- and myosin VI-labelled nanotubes, we find that neither myosin density nor spacing has a significant effect on the gliding speed of actin filaments. This observation supports a simple model of myosin ensembles as energy reservoirs that buffer individual stochastic events to bring about smooth, continuous motion. Furthermore, gliding speed increases with cross-bridge compliance, but is limited by Brownian effects. As a first step to reconstituting muscle motility, we demonstrate human β-cardiac myosin-driven gliding of actin filaments on DNA nanotubes.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)696-700
Number of pages5
JournalNature Nanotechnology
Volume10
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 6 2015

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors thank M. Westfall, D. Smith and L. Hilbert for useful discussions. Research was funded by the American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant (13SDG14270009), National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants 1DP2 CA186752-01 and 1-R01-GM-105646-01-A1 to S.S. and NIH grants GM33289 and HL117138 to J.A.S. R.F.S. is a Life Sciences Research Foundation Fellow. R.E.T. is supported by the NIH (F32 HL123247-02) and A.S.A. is supported by a Lucile Packard CHRI Postdoctoral Award.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

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