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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Centner is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Centner.


Circulation Research | 2000

Differential Expression of Cardiac Titin Isoforms and Modulation of Cellular Stiffness

Olivier Cazorla; A. Freiburg; Michiel Helmes; Thomas Centner; Mark McNabb; Yiming Wu; Karoly Trombitas; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier

Extension of the I-band segment of titin gives rise to part of the diastolic force of cardiac muscle. Previous studies of human cardiac titin transcripts suggested a series of differential splicing events in the I-band segment of titin leading to the so-called N2A and N2B isoform transcripts. Here we investigated titin expression at the protein level in a wide range of mammalian species. Results indicate that the myocardium coexpresses 2 distinct titin isoforms: a smaller isoform containing the N2B element only (N2B titin) and a larger isoform with both the N2B and N2A elements (N2BA titin). The expression ratio of large N2BA to small N2B titin isoforms was found to vary greatly in different species; eg, in the left ventricle the ratio is approximately 0.05 in mouse and approximately 1.5 in pig. Differences in the expression ratio were also found between atria and ventricles and between different layers of the ventricular wall. Immunofluorescence experiments with isoform-specific antibodies suggest that coexpression of these isoforms takes place at the single-myocyte level. The diastolic properties of single cardiac myocytes isolated from various species expressing high levels of the small (rat and mouse) or large (pig) titin isoform were studied. On average, pig myocytes are significantly less stiff than mouse and rat myocytes. Gel analysis indicates that this result cannot be explained by varying amounts of titin in mouse and pig myocardium. Rather, low stiffness of pig myocytes can be explained by its high expression level of the large isoform: the longer extensible region of this isoform results in a lower fractional extension for a given sarcomere length and hence a lower force. Implications of our findings to cardiac function are discussed.


Circulation Research | 2000

Series of Exon-Skipping Events in the Elastic Spring Region of Titin as the Structural Basis for Myofibrillar Elastic Diversity

Alexandra Freiburg; Karoly Trombitas; Wolfgang Hell; Olivier Cazorla; Françoise Fougerousse; Thomas Centner; Bernhard Kolmerer; Christian Witt; Jaques S. Beckmann; Carol C. Gregorio; Henk Granzier; Siegfried Labeit

Titins are megadalton-sized filamentous polypeptides of vertebrate striated muscle. The I-band region of titin underlies the myofibrillar passive tension response to stretch. Here, we show how titins with highly diverse I-band structures and elastic properties are expressed from a single gene. The differentially expressed tandem-Ig, PEVK, and N2B spring elements of titin are coded by 158 exons, which are contained within a 106-kb genomic segment and are all subject to tissue-specific skipping events. In ventricular heart muscle, exons 101 kb apart are joined, leading to the exclusion of 155 exons and the expression of a 2.97-MDa cardiac titin N2B isoform. The atria of mammalian hearts also express larger titins by the exclusion of 90 to 100 exons (cardiac N2BA titin with 3.3 MDa). In the soleus and psoas skeletal muscles, different exon-skipping pathways produce titin transcripts that code for 3.7- and 3.35-MDa titin isoforms, respectively. Mechanical and structural studies indicate that the exon-skipping pathways modulate the fractional extensions of the tandem Ig and PEVK segments, thereby influencing myofibrillar elasticity. Within the mammalian heart, expression of different levels of N2B and N2BA titins likely contributes to the elastic diversity of atrial and ventricular myofibrils.


Circulation Research | 1999

Mechanically Driven Contour-Length Adjustment in Rat Cardiac Titin’s Unique N2B Sequence Titin Is an Adjustable Spring

Michiel Helmes; Karoly Trombitas; Thomas Centner; Miklós Kellermayer; Siegfried Labeit; Wolfgang A. Linke; Henk Granzier

The giant elastic protein titin is largely responsible for passive forces in cardiac myocytes. A number of different titin isoforms with distinctly different structural elements within their central I-band region are expressed in human myocardium. Their coexpression has so far prevented an understanding of the respective contributions of the isoforms to myocardial elasticity. Using isoform-specific antibodies, we find in the present study that rat myocardium expresses predominantly the small N2B titin isoform, which allows us to characterize the elastic behavior of this isoform. The extensibility and force response of N2B titin were studied by using immunoelectron microscopy and by measuring the passive force-sarcomere length (SL) relation of single rat cardiac myocytes under a variety of mechanical conditions. Experimental results were compared with the predictions of a mechanical model in which the elastic titin segment behaves as two wormlike chains, the tandem immunoglobulin (Ig) segments and the PEVK segment (rich in proline [P], glutamate [E], valine [V], and lysine [K] residues), connected in series. The overall contour length was predicted from the sequence of N2B cardiac titin. According to mechanical measurements, above approximately 2.2 microm SL titins elastic segment extends beyond its predicted contour length. Immunoelectron microscopy indicates that a prominent source of this contour-length gain is the extension of the unique N2B sequence (located between proximal tandem Ig segment and PEVK), and that Ig domain unfolding is negligible. Thus, the elastic region of N2B cardiac titin consists of three mechanically distinct extensible segments connected in series: the tandem Ig segment, the PEVK segment, and the unique N2B sequence. Rate-dependent and repetitive stretch-release experiments indicate that both the contour-length gain and the recovery from it involve kinetic processes, probably unfolding and refolding within the N2B segment. As a result, the contour length of titins extensible segment depends on the rate and magnitude of the preceding mechanical perturbations. The rate of recovery from the length gain is slow, ensuring that the adjusted length is maintained through consecutive cardiac cycles and that hysteresis is minimal. Thus, as a result of the extensible properties of the unique N2B sequence, the I-band region of the N2B cardiac titin isoform functions as a molecular spring that is adjustable.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Molecular dissection of N2B cardiac titin's extensibility.

Karoly Trombitas; Alexandra Freiburg; Thomas Centner; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier

Titin is a giant filamentous polypeptide of multidomain construction spanning between the Z- and M-lines of the cardiac muscle sarcomere. Extension of the I-band segment of titin gives rise to a force that underlies part of the diastolic force of cardiac muscle. Titins force arises from its extensible I-band region, which consists of two main segment types: serially linked immunoglobulin-like domains (tandem Ig segments) interrupted with a proline (P)-, glutamate (E)-, valine (V)-, and lysine (K)-rich segment called PEVK segment. In addition to these segments, the extensible region of cardiac titin also contains a unique 572-residue sequence that is part of the cardiac-specific N2B element. In this work, immunoelectron microscopy was used to study the molecular origin of the in vivo extensibility of the I-band region of cardiac titin. The extensibility of the tandem Ig segments, the PEVK segment, and that of the unique N2B sequence were studied, using novel antibodies against Ig domains that flank these segments. Results show that only the tandem Igs extend at sarcomere lengths (SLs) below approximately 2.0 microm, and that, at longer SLs, the PEVK and the unique sequence extend as well. At the longest SLs that may be reached under physiological conditions ( approximately 2.3 microm), the PEVK segment length is approximately 50 nm whereas the unique N2B sequence is approximately 80 nm long. Thus, the unique sequence provides additional extensibility to cardiac titins and this may eliminate the necessity for unfolding of Ig domains under physiological conditions. In summary, this work provides direct evidence that the three main molecular subdomains of N2B titin are all extensible and that their contribution to extensibility decreases in the order of tandem Igs, unique N2B sequence, and PEVK segment.


Biophysical Journal | 2000

Extensibility of Isoforms of Cardiac Titin: Variation in Contour Length of Molecular Subsegments Provides a Basis for Cellular Passive Stiffness Diversity

Karoly Trombitas; Alka Redkar; Thomas Centner; Yiming Wu; Siegfried Labeit; Henk Granzier

Titin is a giant polypeptide that spans between the Z- and M-lines of the cardiac muscle sarcomere and that develops force when extended. This force arises from titins extensible I-band region, which consists mainly of three segment types: serially linked immunoglobulin-like domains (Ig segments), interrupted by the PEVK segment, and the N2B unique sequence. Recently it was reported that the myocardium of large mammals co-expresses small (N2B) and large (N2BA) cardiac isoforms and that the passive stiffness of cardiac myocytes varies with the isoform expression ratio. To understand the molecular basis of the differences in passive stiffness we investigated titins extensibility in bovine atrium, which expresses predominantly N2BA titin, and compared it to that of rat, which expresses predominantly N2B titin. Immunoelectron microscopy was used with antibodies that flank the Ig segments, the PEVK segment, and the unique sequence of the N2B element. The extension of the various segments was then determined as a function of sarcomere length (SL). When slack sarcomeres of bovine atrium were stretched, the PEVK segment extended much more steeply and the unique N2B sequence less steeply than in rat, while the Ig segments behaved similarly in both species. However, the extensions normalized with the segments contour length (i.e., the fractional extensions) of Ig, PEVK, and unique sequence segments all increase less steeply with SL in cow than in rat. Considering that fractional extension determines the level of entropic force, these differences in fractional extension are expected to result in shallow and steep passive force-SL curves in myocytes that express high levels of N2BA and N2B titin, respectively. Thus, the findings provide a molecular basis for passive stiffness diversity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Hypercontractile Properties of Cardiac Muscle Fibers in a Knock-in Mouse Model of Cardiac Myosin-binding Protein-C

Christian Witt; Brenda Gerull; Michael J. Davies; Thomas Centner; Wolfgang A. Linke; Ludwig Thierfelder

Myosin-binding protein-C (MyBP-C) is a component of all striated-muscle sarcomeres, with a well established structural role and a possible function for force regulation. Multiple mutations within the gene for cardiac MyBP-C, one of three known isoforms, have been linked to familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Here we generated a knock-in mouse model that carries N-terminal-shortened cardiac MyBP-C. The mutant protein was designed to have a similar size as the skeletal MyBP-C isoforms, whereas known myosin and titin binding sites as well as the phosphorylatable MyBP-C motif were not altered. We have shown that mutant cardiac MyBP-C is readily incorporated into the sarcomeres of both heterozygous and homozygous animals and can still be phosphorylated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Although histological characterization of wild-type and mutant hearts did not reveal obvious differences in phenotype, left ventricular fibers from homozygous mutant mice exhibited an increased Ca2+ sensitivity of force development, particularly at lower Ca2+concentrations, whereas maximal active force levels remained unchanged. The results allow us to propose a model of how cMyBP-C may affect myosin-head mobility and to rationalize why N-terminal mutations of the protein in some cases of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy could lead to a hypercontractile state.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2000

Molecular tools for the study of titin's differential expression

Thomas Centner; Françoise Fougerousse; Alexandra Freiburg; Christian Witt; Jacques S. Beckmann; Henk Granzier; Karoly Trombitas; Carol C. Gregorio; Siegfried Labeit

Although vertebrate genomes appear to contain only one titin gene, a large variety of quite distinct titin isoforms are expressed in striated muscle tissues. The isoforms appear to be generated by a series of complex, not yet fully characterized differential splicing mechanisms. Here, we provide an overview of the titin-specific antibodies that have been raised by our laboratory to study individual differentially expressed isoforms of titin. The staining patterns obtained in different tissues will contribute to the identification of both the particular titin isoforms that are expressed in the different tissues, as well as their intracellular distributions. In addition, antibodies to titin that are available are rapidly allowing for the refinement of our knowledge of titins elastic spring properties. Knowledge of the nature and structure of vertebrate titins that may also be expressed in nonmuscle tissues may be broadened using these antibodies.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

Identification of muscle specific ring finger proteins as potential regulators of the titin kinase domain.

Thomas Centner; Junko Yano; Eiichi Kimura; Abigail S. McElhinny; Katarina Pelin; Christian Witt; Marie Louise Bang; Karoly Trombitas; Henk Granzier; Carol C. Gregorio; Hiroyuki Sorimachi; Siegfried Labeit


Journal of Cell Biology | 1998

The NH2 Terminus of Titin Spans the Z-Disc: Its Interaction with a Novel 19-kD Ligand (T-cap) Is Required for Sarcomeric Integrity

Carol C. Gregorio; Karoly Trombitas; Thomas Centner; Bernhard Kolmerer; Gunter Stier; Kathleen Kunke; Koichi Suzuki; Franz Obermayr; Bernhard G. Herrmann; Henk Granzier; Hiroyuki Sorimachi; Siegfried Labeit


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Mutations in the nebulin gene associated with autosomal recessive nemaline myopathy.

Katarina Pelin; Pirta Hilpelä; Kati Donner; C. Sewry; P.A. Akkari; Stephen D. Wilton; Duangrurdee Wattanasirichaigoon; Marie Louise Bang; Thomas Centner; Folker Hanefeld; Sylvie Odent; Michel Fardeau; J. Andoni Urtizberea; Francesco Muntoni; Victor Dubowitz; Alan H. Beggs; Nigel G. Laing; Siegfried Labeit; Albert de la Chapelle; Carina Wallgren-Pettersson

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Henk Granzier

Washington State University

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Karoly Trombitas

Washington State University

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Siegfried Labeit

Washington State University

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Siegfried Labeit

Washington State University

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Alexandra Freiburg

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Bernhard Kolmerer

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Françoise Fougerousse

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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