Using the COS cell transfection assay developed previously, we examined which domains of myosin-binding proteins C and H (MyBP-C and MyBP-H) are involved in intracellular interactions with sarcomeric myosin heavy chain(MyHC). Earlier studies demonstrated that overexpression of sarcomeric MyHC in COS cells results in the cytoplasmic assembly of anisotropic, spindle-like aggregates of myosin-containing filaments in the absence of other myofibrillar proteins. When the same sarcomeric MyHC was co-expressed with either MyBP-C or MyBP-H, prominent cable-like co-polymers of MyHC and the MyBPs formed in the cytoplasm instead of the spindle-like aggregates formed by MyHC alone. In vitro binding assays have shown that the C-terminal IgI domain of both MyBP-C(domain C10) and MyBP-H (domain H4) contains the light meromyosin(LMM)-binding sites of each molecule, but this domain cannot explain all of the intracellular properties of the molecules. For example, domains C7-C10 of MyBP-C and domains H1-H4 of MyBP-H are required for the faithful targeting of these proteins to the A-bands of myofibrils in skeletal muscle. Using truncation mutants of both MyBPs tagged with either green fluorescent protein(GFP) or c-myc, we now demonstrate that the last four domains of both MyBP-C and MyBP-H colocalize with the full-length proteins in the MyHC/MyBP cable polymers when co-transfected with MyHC in COS cells. Deletion of the C-terminal IgI domain in either MyBP-C or MyBP-H abrogated cable formation,but the expressed proteins could still colocalize with MyHC-containing filament aggregates. Co-expression of only the C-terminal IgI domain of MyBP-C with sarcomeric MyHC was sufficient for cable formation and colocalization with myosin. We conclude that the C-terminal IgI domains of both MyBP-H and MyBP-C are both necessary and sufficient for inducing MyHC/MyBP cable formation in this COS cell system. However, there must be other myosin-binding sites in MyBP-C and MyBP-H that explain the co-distribution of these proteins with myosin filaments in the absence of cable formation. These latter sites are neither sufficient nor required for cable formation.

You do not currently have access to this content.