Striated Muscle Contraction (Homo sapiens)

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1-45555cytosolTMOD1 MYL3 TNNT1 DMD TPM3 TNNI2 MYL4 MYL2 MYL2 MYL4 TMOD2 MYH8 TTN ADP:Calcium BoundSarcomere ProteinComplexTNNT2 ACTN2 alpha Actin Chain VIM TNNI2 MYH6 TNNC1 TMOD3 ADPTNNC1 MYL2 PiMYL1 TNNI2 TMOD2 MYH3 VIM TMOD4 Ca2+MYL3 TNNT1 TNNI3 alpha Actin Chain ACTN3 ACTN2 MYL1 MYH3 TNNT2 alpha Actin Chain TPM1 Inactive SarcomereProtein ComplexNEB MYBPC3 TNNC1 MYBPC2 ACTN3 MYL3 TMOD1 TMOD1 TPM4 TCAP MYH6 ATP DMD VIM MYL3 ATPTPM3 TPM4 TNNI3 DMD TNNI3 TNNI2 Ca2+ TPM1 MYBPC2 NEB TNNI1 TMOD4 MYH6 TNNT1 TPM2 TPM2 MYBPC2 Ca2+ TMOD1 MYL3 ACTN2 ACTN3 ATP:Calcium BoundSarcomere ProteinComplexTNNC2 TCAP MYBPC3 MYL1 ACTN3 TPM1 Myosin ComplexMYBPC3 MYH3 DES TMOD4 TCAP TMOD2 MYH6 TPM3 MYL4 MYBPC1 TMOD2 DES MYL2 MYH8 MYH8 VIM MYBPC1 MYH3 TNNI1 MYBPC1 TNNC2 TTN TMOD4 TNNI3 TPM4 MYH3 DMD TPM2 TNNT1 TNNI1 MYL1 TPM2 Ca2+ TPM4 alpha Actin Chain TNNT3 TMOD3 TNNC2 MYBPC3 MYH8 MYL4 NEB MYBPC2 TPM3 MYH6 TNNT3 MYL2 DES MYL4 MYH8 TCAP TNNC1 Calcium BoundSarcomere ProteinComplexTTN TNNT3 TNNT2 TTN TNNT3 TNNC2 TNNI1 TMOD3 NEB TMOD3 TNNT2 ADP MYBPC1 TPM1 DES MYL1 ACTN2


Description

Striated muscle contraction is a process whereby force is generated within striated muscle tissue, resulting in a change in muscle geometry, or in short, increased force being exerted on the tendons. Force generation involves a chemo-mechanical energy conversion step that is carried out by the actin/myosin complex activity, which generates force through ATP hydrolysis. Striated muscle is a type of muscle composed of myofibrils, containing repeating units called sarcomeres, in which the contractile myofibrils are arranged in parallel to the axis of the cell, resulting in transverse or oblique striations observable at the level of the light microscope.
Here striated muscle contraction is represented on the basis of calcium binding to the troponin complex, which exposes the active sites of actin. Once the active sites of actin are exposed, the myosin complex bound to ADP can bind actin and the myosin head can pivot, pulling the thin actin and thick myosin filaments past one another. Once the myosin head pivots, ADP is ejected, a fresh ATP can be bound and the energy from the hydrolysis of ATP to ADP is channeled into kinetic energy by resetting the myosin head. With repeated rounds of this cycle the sarcomere containing the thin and thick filaments effectively shortens, forming the basis of muscle contraction. View original pathway at:Reactome.

Comments

Reactome-Converter 
Pathway is converted from Reactome ID: 390522
Reactome-version 
Reactome version: 66
Reactome Author 
Reactome Author: Gillespie, Marc E

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Ontology Terms

 

Bibliography

  1. Gordon AM, Homsher E, Regnier M.; ''Regulation of contraction in striated muscle.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  2. HUXLEY AF, NIEDERGERKE R.; ''Structural changes in muscle during contraction; interference microscopy of living muscle fibres.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  3. HUXLEY AF, NIEDERGERKE R.; ''Measurement of muscle striations in stretch and contraction.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  4. Cooke R.; ''The sliding filament model: 1972-2004.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia
  5. Szent-Györgyi AG.; ''The early history of the biochemistry of muscle contraction.''; PubMed Europe PMC Scholia

History

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CompareRevisionActionTimeUserComment
114638view16:10, 25 January 2021ReactomeTeamReactome version 75
113086view11:14, 2 November 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 74
112320view15:24, 9 October 2020ReactomeTeamReactome version 73
101219view11:11, 1 November 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 66
100757view20:36, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 65
100301view19:13, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 64
99848view15:57, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 63
99405view14:34, 31 October 2018ReactomeTeamreactome version 62 (2nd attempt)
93771view13:35, 16 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
93296view11:19, 9 August 2017ReactomeTeamreactome version 61
87838view11:47, 25 July 2016MirellaKalafatiOntology Term : 'regulatory pathway' added !
86381view09:16, 11 July 2016ReactomeTeamNew pathway

External references

DataNodes

View all...
NameTypeDatabase referenceComment
ACTN2 ProteinP35609 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
ACTN3 ProteinQ08043 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
ADP MetaboliteCHEBI:16761 (ChEBI)
ADP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ComplexR-HSA-390591 (Reactome)
ADPMetaboliteCHEBI:16761 (ChEBI)
ATP MetaboliteCHEBI:15422 (ChEBI)
ATP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ComplexR-HSA-390596 (Reactome)
ATPMetaboliteCHEBI:15422 (ChEBI)
Ca2+ MetaboliteCHEBI:29108 (ChEBI)
Ca2+MetaboliteCHEBI:29108 (ChEBI)
Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ComplexR-HSA-390592 (Reactome)
DES ProteinP17661 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
DMD ProteinP11532 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Inactive Sarcomere Protein ComplexComplexR-HSA-390590 (Reactome)
MYBPC1 ProteinQ00872 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYBPC2 ProteinQ14324 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYBPC3 ProteinQ14896 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYH3 ProteinP11055 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYH6 ProteinP13533 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYH8 ProteinP13535 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYL1 ProteinP05976 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYL2 ProteinP10916 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYL3 ProteinP08590 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
MYL4 ProteinP12829 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
Myosin ComplexComplexR-HSA-390575 (Reactome)
NEB ProteinP20929 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
PiMetaboliteCHEBI:18367 (ChEBI)
TCAP ProteinO15273 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TMOD1 ProteinP28289 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TMOD2 ProteinQ9NZR1 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TMOD3 ProteinQ9NYL9 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TMOD4 ProteinQ9NZQ9 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNC1 ProteinP63316 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNC2 ProteinP02585 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNI1 ProteinP19237 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNI2 ProteinP48788 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNI3 ProteinP19429 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNT1 ProteinP13805 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNT2 ProteinP45379 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TNNT3 ProteinP45378 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TPM1 ProteinP09493 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TPM2 ProteinP07951 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TPM3 ProteinP06753 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TPM4 ProteinP67936 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
TTN ProteinQ8WZ42 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
VIM ProteinP08670 (Uniprot-TrEMBL)
alpha Actin Chain R-HSA-390576 (Reactome)

Annotated Interactions

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SourceTargetTypeDatabase referenceComment
ADP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ArrowR-HSA-390593 (Reactome)
ADP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
R-HSA-390597 (Reactome)
ADPArrowR-HSA-390597 (Reactome)
ATP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ArrowR-HSA-390598 (Reactome)
ATP:Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
R-HSA-390593 (Reactome)
ATPR-HSA-390598 (Reactome)
Ca2+R-HSA-390595 (Reactome)
Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ArrowR-HSA-390595 (Reactome)
Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
ArrowR-HSA-390597 (Reactome)
Calcium Bound

Sarcomere Protein

Complex
R-HSA-390598 (Reactome)
Inactive Sarcomere Protein ComplexR-HSA-390595 (Reactome)
Myosin Complexmim-catalysisR-HSA-390593 (Reactome)
PiArrowR-HSA-390593 (Reactome)
R-HSA-390593 (Reactome) The cleft closes like a clam shell around the ATP molecule, triggering a large shape change that causes the myosin head to release actin and be displaced along the actin filament by a distance of about 5 nm. Hydrolysis of ATP occurs, but the ADP remains tightly bound to the protein.
R-HSA-390595 (Reactome) Troponin (Tn) is the central regulatory protein of striated muscle contraction. Tn consists of three components: troponin I (TNNI3; the inhibitor of actomyosin ATPase), Tn-T (which contains the binding site for tropomyosin) and troponin C (TNNC1, Tn-C). The binding of calcium to TNNC1 abolishes the inhibitory action of Tn on actin filaments. At the start of the striated muscle contraction cycle, a myosin head lacking a bound nucleotide is locked tightly onto an actin filament in a rigor conformation. TNNC1 binds four calcium ions. In an actively contracting muscle this state is very short-lived, being rapidly terminated by the binding of a molecule of ATP.
R-HSA-390597 (Reactome) The weak binding of the myosin head to the new site on the actin filament causes release of the inorganic phosphate produced by ATP hydrolysis, concomitantly with the tight binding of the head to actin. This release triggers the power stroke, a force-generating change in the shape during which the head regains its original conformation. In the course of the power stroke, the head loses its bound ADP, thereby returning to the start of a new cycle.
R-HSA-390598 (Reactome) A molecule of ATP binds to the large cleft on the side of the myosin head farthest from the actin filament and immediately causes a slight change in the conformation of the domains that make up the actin-binding site. This reduces the affinity of the myosin head for actin and allows it to move along the filament.
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