3D - Thin Filament & Z Disc
Thin filament at the Z-disc. This region of the sarcomere is a rather sophisticated structure which serves mechanical and regulatory functions. It also allows for the organization of the thin filaments in a ratio of 6 thin filaments around one single thick filament. Multiple proteins are present at the Z-disc. T-Cap is a capping protein present at the end of the titin molecules. Filamin is the capping protein at the end of the thin filament. CARP extends away from the Z-disc and, along with nebulette and filamin, may form the visible N-disc seen on electron microscopy. Other proteins which are present here include ALP, calcineurin, calsarcin, mink, myopadin, myopalladin, MLP, and ZASP/Cypher/LDB3. Some of these proteins are thought to form part of the cardiac stretch-sensing mechanism which may, in turn, mediate signal transduction to adapt to hypertrophic stimuli. The core of the organization of the Z-disc is α-actinin. Many of the proteins identified in the Z-disc are thought to interact with α-actinin. Mutations in several of these proteins have been described in patients with dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathies.
The Desmin filaments play a role in keeping the sarcomeres in register throughout the myocyte, and also anchor the sarcoplasmic cytoskeleton to the sarcolemmal cytoskeleton.