10.3389/fphys.2020.00494.s012 Robbert J. van der Pijl Robbert J. van der Pijl Brian Hudson Brian Hudson Tomotaroh Granzier-Nakajima Tomotaroh Granzier-Nakajima Frank Li Frank Li Anne M. Knottnerus Anne M. Knottnerus John Smith John Smith Charles S. Chung Charles S. Chung Michael Gotthardt Michael Gotthardt Henk L. Granzier Henk L. Granzier Coen A. C. Ottenheijm Coen A. C. Ottenheijm Table_3_Deleting Titin’s C-Terminal PEVK Exons Increases Passive Stiffness, Alters Splicing, and Induces Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Hypertrophy in Skeletal Muscle.docx Frontiers 2020 passive tension titin PEVK region hypertrophy RNA splicing 2020-05-29 14:47:27 Dataset https://frontiersin.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_3_Deleting_Titin_s_C-Terminal_PEVK_Exons_Increases_Passive_Stiffness_Alters_Splicing_and_Induces_Cross-Sectional_and_Longitudinal_Hypertrophy_in_Skeletal_Muscle_docx/12389444 <p>The Proline, Glutamate, Valine and Lysine-rich (PEVK) region of titin constitutes an entropic spring that provides passive tension to striated muscle. To study the functional and structural repercussions of a small reduction in the size of the PEVK region, we investigated skeletal muscles of a mouse with the constitutively expressed C-terminal PEVK exons 219–225 deleted, the Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> model (MGI: Ttn<sup>TM 2.1Mgot</sup>). Based on this deletion, passive tension in skeletal muscle was predicted to be increased by ∼17% (sarcomere length 3.0 μm). In contrast, measured passive tension (sarcomere length 3.0 μm) in both soleus and EDL muscles was increased 53 ± 11% and 62 ± 4%, respectively. This unexpected increase was due to changes in titin, not to alterations in the extracellular matrix, and is likely caused by co-expression of two titin isoforms in Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> muscles: a larger isoform that represents the Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> N2A titin and a smaller isoform, referred to as N2A2. N2A2 represents a splicing adaption with reduced expression of spring element exons, as determined by titin exon microarray analysis. Maximal tetanic tension was increased in Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> soleus muscle (WT 240 ± 9; Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> 276 ± 17 mN/mm<sup>2</sup>), but was reduced in EDL muscle (WT 315 ± 9; Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> 280 ± 14 mN/mm<sup>2</sup>). The changes in active tension coincided with a switch toward slow fiber types and, unexpectedly, faster kinetics of tension generation and relaxation. Functional overload (FO; ablation) and hindlimb suspension (HS; unloading) experiments were also conducted. Ttn<sup>Δ219–225</sup> mice showed increases in both longitudinal hypertrophy (increased number of sarcomeres in series) and cross-sectional hypertrophy (increased number of sarcomeres in parallel) in response to FO and attenuated cross-sectional atrophy in response to HS. In summary, slow- and fast-twitch muscles in a mouse model devoid of titin’s PEVK exons 219–225 have high passive tension, due in part to alterations elsewhere in splicing of titin’s spring region, increased kinetics of tension generation and relaxation, and altered trophic responses to both functional overload and unloading. This implicates titin’s C-terminal PEVK region in regulating passive and active muscle mechanics and muscle plasticity.</p>