
Jim Spudich
· Douglass M. and Nola Leishman Professor of Cardiovascular Disease, Department of Biochemistry, EmeritusStanford University · Biochemistry
Active 1963–2024
Research topics
- Genetics
- Cardiology
- Cell biology
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Biology
Selected publications
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences · 2021 · 80 citations
- Cardiology
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common inherited form of heart disease, associated with over 1,000 mutations, many in β-cardiac myosin (MYH7). Molecular studies of myosin with different HCM mutations have revealed a diversity of effects on ATPase and load-sensitive rate of detachment from actin. It has been difficult to predict how such diverse molecular effects combine to influence forces at the cellular level and further influence cellular phenotypes. This study focused on the P710R mutation that dramatically decreased in vitro motility velocity and actin-activated ATPase, in contrast to other MYH7 mutations. Optical trap measurements of single myosin molecules revealed that this mutation reduced the step size of the myosin motor and the load sensitivity of the actin detachment rate. Conversely, this mutation destabilized the super relaxed state in longer, two-headed myosin constructs, freeing more heads to generate force. Micropatterned human induced pluripotent derived stem cell (hiPSC)-cardiomyocytes CRISPR-edited with the P710R mutation produced significantly increased force (measured by traction force microscopy) compared with isogenic control cells. The P710R mutation also caused cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and cytoskeletal remodeling as measured by immunostaining and electron microscopy. Cellular hypertrophy was prevented in the P710R cells by inhibition of ERK or Akt. Finally, we used a computational model that integrated the measured molecular changes to predict the measured traction forces. These results confirm a key role for regulation of the super relaxed state in driving hypercontractility in HCM with the P710R mutation and demonstrate the value of a multiscale approach in revealing key mechanisms of disease.
Recent grants
NIH · $454k · 1988
NIH · $2.2M · 2003
Molecular characterization of cardiomyopathy mutations in human cardiac myosin
NIH · $3.6M · 2013–2023
NIH · $26.3M · 2010
NIH · $197k · 1986
Frequent coauthors
- 148 shared
Kathleen M. Ruppel
Stanford University
- 51 shared
Darshan V. Trivedi
- 47 shared
Saswata S. Sarkar
Cytokinetics (United States)
- 44 shared
Arjun S. Adhikari
Cardiovascular Institute of the South
- 41 shared
Ronald S. Rock
University of Chicago
- 41 shared
Daniel Bernstein
Stanford University
- 38 shared
Makenna M. Morck
Cardiovascular Institute of the South
- 32 shared
Amit Mehta
Johns Hopkins Medicine
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