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Creators/Authors contains: "Watanabe, Marissa"

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  1. null (Ed.)
    Morbidity and mortality associated with heart disease is a growing threat to the global population, and novel therapies are needed. Mavacamten (formerly called MYK-461) is a small molecule that binds to cardiac myosin and inhibits myosin ATPase. Mavacamten is currently in clinical trials for the treatment of obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), and it may provide benefits for treating other forms of heart disease. We investigated the effect of mavacamten on cardiac muscle contraction in two transgenic mouse lines expressing the human isoform of cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) in their hearts. Control mice expressed wild-type RLC (WT-RLC), and HCM mice expressed the N47K RLC mutation. In the absence of mavacamten, skinned papillary muscle strips from WT-RLC mice produced greater isometric force than strips from N47K mice. Adding 0.3 µM mavacamten decreased maximal isometric force and reduced Ca 2+ sensitivity of contraction for both genotypes, but this reduction in pCa 50 was nearly twice as large for WT-RLC versus N47K. We also used stochastic length-perturbation analysis to characterize cross-bridge kinetics. The cross-bridge detachment rate was measured as a function of [MgATP] to determine the effect of mavacamten on myosin nucleotide handling rates. Mavacamten increased the MgADP release and MgATP binding rates for both genotypes, thereby contributing to faster cross-bridge detachment, which could speed up myocardial relaxation during diastole. Our data suggest that mavacamten reduces isometric tension and Ca 2+ sensitivity of contraction via decreased strong cross-bridge binding. Mavacamten may become a useful therapy for patients with heart disease, including some forms of HCM. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Mavacamten is a pharmaceutical that binds to myosin, and it is under investigation as a therapy for some forms of heart disease. We show that mavacamten reduces isometric tension and Ca 2+ sensitivity of contraction in skinned myocardial strips from a mouse model of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy that expresses the N47K mutation in cardiac myosin regulatory light chain. Mavacamten reduces contractility by decreasing strong cross-bridge binding, partially due to faster cross-bridge nucleotide handling rates that speed up myosin detachment. 
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  2. Background and PurposeHeart failure can reflect impaired contractile function at the myofilament level. In healthy hearts, myofilaments become more sensitive to Ca2+as cells are stretched. This represents a fundamental property of the myocardium that contributes to the Frank–Starling response, although the molecular mechanisms underlying the effect remain unclear. Mavacamten, which binds to myosin, is under investigation as a potential therapy for heart disease. We investigated how mavacamten affects the sarcomere‐length dependence of Ca2+‐sensitive isometric contraction to determine how mavacamten might modulate the Frank–Starling mechanism. Experimental ApproachMulticellular preparations from the left ventricular‐free wall of hearts from organ donors were chemically permeabilized and Ca2+activated in the presence or absence of 0.5‐μM mavacamten at 1.9 or 2.3‐μm sarcomere length (37°C). Isometric force and frequency‐dependent viscoelastic myocardial stiffness measurements were made. Key ResultsAt both sarcomere lengths, mavacamten reduced maximal force and Ca2+sensitivity of contraction. In the presence and absence of mavacamten, Ca2+sensitivity of force increased as sarcomere length increased. This suggests that the length‐dependent activation response was maintained in human myocardium, even though mavacamten reduced Ca2+sensitivity. There were subtle effects of mavacamten reducing force values under relaxed conditions (pCa 8.0), as well as slowing myosin cross‐bridge recruitment and speeding cross‐bridge detachment under maximally activated conditions (pCa 4.5). Conclusion and ImplicationsMavacamten did not eliminate sarcomere length‐dependent increases in the Ca2+sensitivity of contraction in myocardial strips from organ donors at physiological temperature. Drugs that modulate myofilament function may be useful therapies for cardiomyopathies. 
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