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1.
To identify the interaction sites of Tm, we measured the rotational motion of a spin-label covalently bound to the side chain of a cysteine that was genetically incorporated into rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin (Tm) at positions 13, 36, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271, or 279. Most of the Tm residues were immobilized on actin filaments with myosin-S1 bound to them. The residues in the mid-portion of Tm, namely, 146, 174, 190, 209, and 230, were mobilized when the troponin (Tn) complex bound to the actin-Tm-S1 filaments. The addition of Ca2+ ions partially reversed the Tn-induced mobilization. In contrast, residues at the joint region of Tm, 13, 36, 271, and 279 were unchanged or oppositely changed. All of these changes were detected using a maleimide spin label and less obviously using a methanesulfonate label. These results indicated that Tm was fixed on thin filaments with myosin bound to them, although a small change in the flexibility of the side chains of Tm residues, presumably interfaced with Tn, actin and myosin, was induced by the binding of Tn and Ca2+. These findings suggest that even in the myosin-bound (open) state, Ca2+ may regulate actomyosin contractile properties via Tm.  相似文献   

2.
To identify interaction sites we measured the rotational motion of a spin label covalently bound to the side chain of a cysteine genetically incorporated into rabbit skeletal muscle tropomyosin (Tm) at positions 13, 36, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271, and 279. Upon the addition of F-actin, the mobility of all the spin labels, especially at position 13, 271, or 279, of Tm was inhibited significantly. Slow spin-label motion at the C-terminus (at the 230th and 271st residues) was observed upon addition of troponin. The binding of myosin-head S1 fragments without troponin immobilized Tm residues at 146, 160, 190, 209, 230, 271, and 279, suggesting that these residues are involved in a direct interaction between Tm and actin in its open state. As immobilization occurred at substoichiometric amounts of S1 binding to actin (a 1:7 molar ratio), the structural changes induced by S1 binding to one actin subunit must have propagated and influenced interaction sites over seven actin subunits.  相似文献   

3.
Troponin (Tn), in association with tropomyosin (Tm), plays a central role in the calcium regulation of striated muscle contraction. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between probes attached to the Tn subunits (TnC, TnI, TnT) and to Tm was measured to study the spatial relationship between Tn and Tm on the thin filament. We generated single-cysteine mutants of rabbit skeletal muscle α-Tm, TnI and the β-TnT 25-kDa fragment. The energy donor was attached to a single-cysteine residue at position 60, 73, 127, 159, 200 or 250 on TnT, at 98 on TnC and at 1, 9, 133 or 181 on TnI, while the energy acceptor was located at 13, 146, 160, 174, 190, 209, 230, 271 or 279 on Tm. FRET analysis showed a distinct Ca2+-induced conformational change of the Tm-Tn complex and revealed that TnT60 and TnT73 were closer to Tm13 than Tm279, indicating that the elongated N-terminal region of TnT extends beyond the beginning of the next Tm molecule on the actin filament. Using the atomic coordinates of the crystal structures of Tm and the Tn core domain, we searched for the disposition and orientation of these structures by minimizing the deviations of the calculated FRET efficiencies from the observed FRET efficiencies in order to construct atomic models of the Tn-Tm complex with and without bound Ca2+. In the best-fit models, the Tn core domain is located on residues 160-200 of Tm, with the arrowhead-shaped I-T arm tilting toward the C-terminus of Tm. The angle between the Tm axis and the long axis of TnC is ∼ 75° and ∼ 85° with and without bound Ca2+, respectively. The models indicate that the long axis of TnC is perpendicular to the thin filament without bound Ca2+, and that TnC and the I-T arm tilt toward the filament axis and rotate around the Tm axis by ∼ 20° upon Ca2+ binding.  相似文献   

4.
Small-angle X-ray scattering experiments were carried out to investigate the structural changes of cardiac thin filaments induced by the cardiomyopathy-causing E244D mutation in troponin T (TnT). We examined native thin filaments (NTF) from a bovine heart, reconstituted thin filaments containing human cardiac wild-type Tn (WTF), and filaments containing the E244D mutant of Tn (DTF), in the absence and presence of Ca2+. Analysis by model calculation showed that upon Ca2+-activation, tropomyosin (Tm) and Tn in the WTF and NTF moved together in a direction to expose myosin-binding sites on actin. On the other hand, Tm and Tn of the DTF moved in the opposite directions to each other upon Ca2+-activation. These movements caused Tm to expose more myosin-binding sites on actin than the WTF, suggesting that the affinity of myosin for actin is higher for the DTF. Thus, the mutation-induced structural changes in thin filaments would increase the number of myosin molecules bound to actin compared with the WTF, resulting in the force enhancement observed for the E244D mutation.  相似文献   

5.
The Ca2+-dependent interaction of troponin I (TnI) with actin·tropomyosin (Tm) in muscle thin filaments is a critical step in the regulation of muscle contraction. Previous studies have suggested that, in the absence of Ca2+, TnI interacts with Tm and actin in reconstituted muscle thin filaments, maintaining Tm at the outer domain of actin and blocking myosin-actin interaction. To obtain direct evidence for this Tm-TnI interaction, we performed photochemical crosslinking studies using Tm labeled with 4-maleimidobenzophenone at position 146 or 174 (Tm*146 or Tm*174, respectively), reconstituted with actin and troponin [composed of TnI, troponin T (TnT), and troponin C] or with actin and TnI. After near-UV irradiation, SDS gels of the Tm*146-containing thin filament showed three new high-molecular-weight bands determined to be crosslinked products Tm*146-TnI, Tm*146-troponin C, and Tm*146-TnT using fluorescence-labeled TnI, mass spectrometry, and Western blot analysis. While Tm*146-TnI was produced only in the absence of Ca2+, the production of other crosslinked species did not show Ca2+ dependence. Tm*174 mainly crosslinked to TnT. In the absence of actin, a similar crosslinking pattern was obtained with a much lower yield. A tryptic peptide from Tm*146-TnI with a molecular mass of 2601.2 Da that was not present in the tryptic peptides of Tm*146 or TnI was identified using HPLC and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight. This was shown, using absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, to be the 4-maleimidobenzophenone-labeled peptide from Tm crosslinked to TnI peptide 157-163. These data, which show that a region in the C-terminal domain of TnI interacts with Tm in the absence of Ca2+, support the hypothesis that a TnI-Tm interaction maintains Tm at the outer domain of actin and will help efforts to localize troponin in actin·Tm muscle thin filaments.  相似文献   

6.
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) was used to construct an atomic model of the actin–tropomyosin (Tm) complex on a reconstituted thin filament. We generated five single-cysteine mutants in the 146–174 region of rabbit skeletal muscle α-Tm. An energy donor probe was attached to a single-cysteine Tm residue, while an energy acceptor probe was located in actin Gln41, actin Cys374, or the actin nucleotide binding site. From these donor–acceptor pairs, FRET efficiencies were determined with and without Ca2+. Using the atomic coordinates for F-actin and Tm, we searched all possible arrangements for Tm segment 146–174 on F-actin to calculate the FRET efficiency for each donor–acceptor pair in each arrangement. By minimizing the squared sum of deviations for the calculated FRET efficiencies from the observed FRET efficiencies, we determined the location of the Tm segment on the F-actin filament. Furthermore, we generated a set of five single-cysteine mutants in each of the four Tm regions 41–69, 83–111, 216–244, and 252–279. Using the same procedures, we determined each segment's location on the F-actin filament. In the best-fit model, Tm runs along actin residues 217–236, which were reported to compose the Tm binding site. Electrostatic, hydrogen-bonding, and hydrophobic interactions are involved in actin and Tm binding. The C-terminal region of Tm was observed to contact actin more closely than did the N-terminal region. Tm contacts more residues on actin without Ca2+ than with it. Ca2+-induced changes on the actin–Tm contact surface strongly affect the F-actin structure, which is important for muscle regulation.  相似文献   

7.
Striated muscle contraction in most animals is regulated at least in part by the troponin-tropomyosin (Tn-Tm) switch on the thin (actin-containing) filaments. The only group that has been suggested to lack actin-linked regulation is the mollusks, where contraction is regulated through the myosin heads on the thick filaments. However, molluscan gene sequence data suggest the presence of troponin (Tn) components, consistent with actin-linked regulation, and some biochemical and immunological data also support this idea. The presence of actin-linked (in addition to myosin-linked) regulation in mollusks would simplify our general picture of muscle regulation by extending actin-linked regulation to this phylum as well. We have investigated this question structurally by determining the effect of Ca2+ on the position of Tm in native thin filaments from scallop striated adductor muscle. Three-dimensional reconstructions of negatively stained filaments were determined by electron microscopy and single-particle image analysis. At low Ca2+, Tm appeared to occupy the “blocking” position, on the outer domain of actin, identified in earlier studies of regulated thin filaments in the low-Ca2+ state. In this position, Tm would sterically block myosin binding, switching off filament activity. At high Ca2+, Tm appeared to move toward a position on the inner domain, similar to that induced by Ca2+ in regulated thin filaments. This Ca2+-induced movement of Tm is consistent with the hypothesis that scallop thin filaments are Ca2+ regulated.  相似文献   

8.
Tropomyosin (Tm) is a key factor in the molecular mechanisms that regulate the binding of myosin motors to actin filaments (F-Actins) in most eukaryotic cells. This regulation is achieved by the azimuthal repositioning of Tm along the actin (Ac):Tm:troponin (Tn) thin filament to block or expose myosin binding sites on Ac. In striated muscle, including involuntary cardiac muscle, Tm regulates muscle contraction by coupling Ca2 + binding to Tn with myosin binding to the thin filament. In smooth muscle, the switch is the posttranslational modification of the myosin. Depending on the activation state of Tn and the binding state of myosin, Tm can occupy the blocked, closed, or open position on Ac. Using native cryogenic 3DEM (three-dimensional electron microscopy), we have directly resolved and visualized cardiac and gizzard muscle Tm on filamentous Ac in the position that corresponds to the closed state. From the 8-Å-resolution structure of the reconstituted Ac:Tm filament formed with gizzard-derived Tm, we discuss two possible mechanisms for the transition from closed to open state and describe the role Tm plays in blocking myosin tight binding in the closed-state position.  相似文献   

9.
Actin thin filaments containing bound tropomyosin (Tm) or tropomyosin troponin (Tm.Tn) exist in two states ("off" and "on") with different affinities for myosin heads (S1), which results in the cooperative binding of S1. The rate of S1 binding to, and dissociating from, actin, Tm.actin, and Tm.Tn.actin, monitored by light scattering (LS), was compared with the rate of change in state, monitored by the excimer fluorescence (Fl) of a pyrene label attached to Tm. The ATP-induced S1 dissociation showed similar exponential decreases in LS for actin.S1, Tm.actin.S1, and Tm.Tn.actin.S1 +/- Ca2+. The Fl change, however, showed a delay that was greater for Tm.Tn.actin than Tm.actin, independent of Ca2+. The S1 binding kinetics gave observed rate constants for the S1-induced change in state that were 5-6 times the observed rate constants of S1 binding to Tm.actin, which were increased to 10-12 for Tm.Tn.actin, independent of Ca2+. The rate of the Fl signals showed that the on/off states were in rapid equilibrium. These data indicate that the apparent cooperative unit for Tm.actin is 5-6 actin subunits rather than the minimum structural unit size of 7, and is increased to 10-12 subunits for Tm.Tn.actin, independent of the presence of Ca2+. Thus, Tm appears semi-flexible, and Tn increases communication between neighboring structural units. A general model for the dynamic transitions involved in muscle regulation is presented.  相似文献   

10.
The regulation of muscle contraction by calcium involves interactions among actin filaments, myosin-S1, tropomyosin (Tm), and troponin (Tn). We have extended our previous model in which the TmTn regulatory units are treated as a continuous flexible chain, and applied it to transient kinetic data. We have measured the time course of myosin-S1 binding to actin-Tm-Tn filaments in solution at various calcium levels with [actin]/[myosin] ratios of 10 and 0.1, which exhibit modest slowing as [Ca2+] is reduced and a lag phase at low calcium. These observations can be explained if myosin binds to actin in two steps, where the first step is rate-limiting and blocked by TmTnI at low calcium, and the second step is fast, reversible, and controlled by the neighboring configuration of coupled tropomyosin-troponin units. The model can describe the calcium dependence of the observed myosin binding reactions and predicts cooperative calcium binding to TnC with competition between actin and Ca-TnC for the binding of TnI. Implications for theories of thin-filament regulation in muscle are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The molecular regulation of striated muscle contraction couples the binding and dissociation of Ca2+ on troponin (Tn) to the movement of tropomyosin on actin filaments. In turn, this process exposes or blocks myosin binding sites on actin, thereby controlling myosin crossbridge dynamics and consequently muscle contraction. Using 3D electron microscopy, we recently provided structural evidence that a C-terminal extension of TnI is anchored on actin at low Ca2+ and competes with tropomyosin for a common site to drive tropomyosin to the B-state location, a constrained, relaxing position on actin that inhibits myosin-crossbridge association. Here, we show that release of this constraint at high Ca2+ allows a second segment of troponin, probably representing parts of TnT or the troponin core domain, to promote tropomyosin movement on actin to the Ca2+-induced C-state location. With tropomyosin stabilized in this position, myosin binding interactions can begin. Tropomyosin appears to oscillate to a higher degree between respective B- and C-state positions on troponin-free filaments than on fully regulated filaments, suggesting that tropomyosin positioning in both states is troponin-dependent. By biasing tropomyosin to either of these two positions, troponin appears to have two distinct structural functions; in relaxed muscles at low Ca2+, troponin operates as an inhibitor, while in activated muscles at high Ca2+, it acts as a promoter to initiate contraction.  相似文献   

12.
The role played by Ca2+ in the stability of cytoplasmic actin and myosin filaments was investigated ultrastructurally with negatively stained isolated cytoplasm from Chaos carolinensis. Cytoplasm was incubated in solutions containing 5, 10, 15 and 25 mM EGTA for periods of time varying from 2 to 20 min. As either the EGTA concentration or duration of incubation was increased, the extent of myosin and actin filament depolymerization increased. The actin filaments depolymerized except where they were stabilized by interaction with myosin. With longer incubation times or higher EGTA concentrations complete depolymerization of the actin filaments could be accomplished. Myosin aggregates also disassembled and became shorter, while monomeric myosin labelled adjacent thin filaments to form arrowhead complexes resembling myosin enriched actomyosin [1]. These actomyosin complexes were relatively stable at low Ca2+ concentrations. In addition, the complexes showed a characteristic 35 nm periodicity and were dissociable in the presence of Mg2+-ATP. The actin containing filaments were more labile at low Ca2+ concentrations than the myosin aggregates. These results suggest that in cells capable of regulating their Ca2+ concentrations efficiently, filament polymerization-depolymerization could play a role in the control of cytoplasmic streaming.  相似文献   

13.
The contractile and enzymatic activities of myosin VI are regulated by calcium binding to associated calmodulin (CaM) light chains. We have used transient phosphorescence anisotropy to monitor the microsecond rotational dynamics of erythrosin-iodoacetamide-labeled actin with strongly bound myosin VI (MVI) and to evaluate the effect of MVI-bound CaM light chain on actin filament dynamics. MVI binding lowers the amplitude but accelerates actin filament microsecond dynamics in a Ca2+- and CaM-dependent manner, as indicated from an increase in the final anisotropy and a decrease in the correlation time of transient phosphorescence anisotropy decays. MVI with bound apo-CaM or Ca2+-CaM weakly affects actin filament microsecond dynamics, relative to other myosins (e.g., muscle myosin II and myosin Va). CaM dissociation from bound MVI damps filament rotational dynamics (i.e., increases the torsional rigidity), such that the perturbation is comparable to that induced by other characterized myosins. Analysis of individual actin filament shape fluctuations imaged by fluorescence microscopy reveals a correlated effect on filament bending mechanics. These data support a model in which Ca2+-dependent CaM binding to the IQ domain of MVI is linked to an allosteric reorganization of the actin binding site(s), which alters the structural dynamics and the mechanical rigidity of actin filaments. Such modulation of filament dynamics may contribute to the Ca2+- and CaM-dependent regulation of myosin VI motility and ATP utilization.  相似文献   

14.
It has been possible to specifically label rabbit skeletal muscle actin at Lys-237 with 2,4-pentanedione, producing an enamine. This reaction can be reversed with hydroxylamine. The modification can be carried out with actin in either the G- or F-forms and does not affect polymerization-depolymerization. The modification does affect, however, the interaction of tropomyosin (Tm) with the modified F-actin. In the absence of Ca2+ and Mg2+ (mu = 0.12), Tm failed to bind to the modified F-actin whereas it did bind to unmodified F-actin (1 Tm:7 actins). Tm binding could be restored under these conditions by the addition of either troponin (Tn), Mg2+, or Mg2+ and Ca2+. Under certain conditions, Tm alone has been shown to inhibit actin-activated heavy meromyosin (HMM)-Mg2+-ATPase. This inhibition did not occur with the modified F-actin even though Tm was bound (approximately 1 Tm:7 actins). Even when Tn was added to this system (in the absence of Ca2+), no inhibition of ATPase could be observed. Thus, this modification appears to prevent F-actin X Tm from assuming the "blocking" inhibitory position (conformation). In addition, Tn appears to enhance the activation of heavy meromyosin-Mg2+-ATPase by the modified F-actin X Tm complex whether Ca2+ is present or not. This state may be analogous to the potentiated state (Murray, J. M., Knox, M. K., Trueblood, C. E., and Weber, A. (1982) Biochemistry 27, 906-915) seen with myosin subfragment 1-saturated actin at low ATP levels. Thus, using modified and unmodified F-actin, it is possible to produce three Tm X actin states: off (F-actin X Tm), on (modified F-actin X Tm), and "potentiated" (modified F-actin X Tm X Tn).  相似文献   

15.
At the inner surface of the stagnant chloroplasts of Characeae cells, bundles of actin filaments having uniform polarity are anchored. These bundles are responsible for generating the motive force of cytoplasmic streaming. It is now possible to induce movement of either beads coated with foreign myosin or organelles associated with myosin along the characean actin bundles. The Ca2+ sensitivities of the reconstitued movements are consistent with those of the actin-activated myosin ATPases. The use of reconstituted systems is finding wide application in the detection of various myosins in materials from which myosin is not significantly purified. Furthermore, sliding velocities and the Ca2+ regulation of myosins bound to organelles are now being determined. Recipient of the Botanical Society Award for Young Scientists, 1987.  相似文献   

16.
Cardiac muscle contraction depends on interactions between thick (myosin) and thin (actin) filaments (TFs). TFs are regulated by intracellular Ca2+ levels. Under activating conditions Ca2+ binds to the troponin complex and displaces tropomyosin from myosin binding sites on the TF surface to allow actomyosin interactions. Recent studies have shown that in addition to Ca2+, the first four N-terminal domains (NTDs) of cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C) (e.g. C0, C1, M and C2), are potent modulators of the TF activity, but the mechanism of their collective action is poorly understood. Previously, we showed that C1 activates the TF at low Ca2+ and C0 stabilizes binding of C1 to the TF, but the ability of C2 to bind and/or affect the TF remains unknown. Here we obtained 7.5 Å resolution cryo-EM reconstruction of C2-decorated actin filaments to demonstrate that C2 binds to actin in a single structural mode that does not activate the TF unlike the polymorphic binding of C0 and C1 to actin. Comparison of amino acid sequences of C2 with either C0 or C1 shows low levels of identity between the residues involved in interactions with the TF but high levels of conservation for residues involved in Ig fold stabilization. This provides a structural basis for strikingly different interactions of structurally homologous C0, C1 and C2 with the TF. Our detailed analysis of the interaction of C2 with the actin filament provides crucial information required to model the collective action of cMyBP-C NTDs on the cardiac TF.  相似文献   

17.
Cooperative interaction between myosin and actin filaments has been detected by a number of different methods, and has been suggested to have some role in force generation by the actomyosin motor. In this study, we observed the binding of myosin to actin filaments directly using fluorescence microscopy to analyze the mechanism of the cooperative interaction in more detail. For this purpose, we prepared fluorescently labeled heavy meromyosin (HMM) of rabbit skeletal muscle myosin and Dictyostelium myosin II. Both types of HMMs formed fluorescent clusters along actin filaments when added at substoichiometric amounts. Quantitative analysis of the fluorescence intensity of the HMM clusters revealed that there are two distinct types of cooperative binding. The stronger form was observed along Ca2+-actin filaments with substoichiometric amounts of bound phalloidin, in which the density of HMM molecules in the clusters was comparable to full decoration. The novel, weaker form was observed along Mg2+-actin filaments with and without stoichiometric amounts of phalloidin. HMM density in the clusters of the weaker form was several-fold lower than full decoration. The weak cooperative binding required sub-micromolar ATP, and did not occur in the absence of nucleotides or in the presence of ADP and ADP-Vi. The G680V mutant of Dictyostelium HMM, which over-occupies the ADP-Pi bound state in the presence of actin filaments and ATP, also formed clusters along Mg2+-actin filaments, suggesting that the weak cooperative binding of HMM to actin filaments occurs or initiates at an intermediate state of the actomyosin-ADP-Pi complex other than that attained by adding ADP-Vi.  相似文献   

18.
We found that a small, reproducible amount of calmodulin is present in the cytoskeleton of human platelets. Triton-insoluble materials (cytoskeletons), which were prepared by cetrifugation at 1000 × g for 10 min of platelets after lysis by Triton X-100, stimulated cyclic AMP phosphodiesterase activity in the presence of Ca2+ but not in the presence of the calcium chelator, EGTA, or the calmodulin antagonist, trifluoperazine. The activation of the enzyme was also obtained after heating Triton-insoluble materials. An alkaline glycerol polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of fractions obtained after gel fitration of solubilized Triton residues showed a protein band which had a faster electrophoretic mobility in the absence than in the presence of Ca2+. Upon thrombin activation of platelets, calmodulin in the Triton-insoluble cytoskeletons increased rapidly parallel to actin, actin-binding protein and myosin. With other stimulants such as collagen, epinephrine and ADP, similar results were obtained but with slower association of these proteins with cytoskeletons. However, after treatment with the Ca2+-inophore A23187, calmodulin, actin and actin-binding protein in Triton residues decreased rapidly, whereas the association of myosin increased. Thus, calmodulin seems to be associated with actin filaments rather than myosin filaments, and may be involved in the generation of contractile force in the cell.  相似文献   

19.
Rabbit skeletal muscle alpha-tropomyosin (Tm) and the deletion mutant (D234Tm) in which internal actin-binding pseudo-repeats 2, 3, and 4 are missing [Landis et al. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 14051-14056] were used to investigate the interaction between actin and tropomyosin or actin and troponin (Tn) by means of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). FRET between Cys-190 of D234Tm and Gln-41 or Cys-374 of actin did not cause any significant Ca2+-induced movement of D234Tm, as reported previously for native Tm [Miki et al. (1998) J. Biochem. 123, 1104-1111]. FRET did not show any significant S1-induced movement of Tm and D234Tm on thin filaments either. The distances between Cys-133 of TnI, and Gln-41 and Cys-374 of actin on thin filaments reconstituted with D234Tm (mutant thin filaments) were almost the same as those on thin filaments with native Tm (wild-type thin filaments) in the absence of Ca2+. Upon binding of Ca2+ to TnC, these distances on mutant thin filaments increased by approximately 10 A in the same way as on wild-type thin filaments, which corresponds to a Ca2+-induced conformational change of thin filaments [Miki et al. (1998) J. Biochem. 123, 324-331]. The rigor binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) further increased these distances by approximately 7 A on both wild-type and mutant thin filaments when the thin filaments were fully decorated with S1. This indicates that a further conformational change on thin filaments was induced by S1 rigor-binding (S1-induced or open state). Plots of the extent of S1-induced conformational change vs. molar ratio of S1 to actin showed that the curve for wild-type thin filaments is hyperbolic, whereas that for mutant thin filaments is sigmoidal. This suggests that the transition to the S1-induced state on mutant thin filaments is depressed with a low population of rigor S1. In the absence of Ca2+, the distance also increased on both wild-type and mutant thin filaments close to the level in the presence of Ca2+ as the molar ratio of S1 to actin increased up to 1. The curves are sigmoidal for both wild-type and mutant thin filaments. The addition of ATP completely reversed the changes in FRET induced by rigor S1 binding. For mutant thin filaments, the transition from the closed state to the open state in the presence of ATP is strongly depressed, which results in the inhibition of acto-myosin ATPase even in the presence of Ca2+. The present FRET measurements provide structural evidence for three states of thin filaments (relaxed, Ca2+-induced or closed, and S1-induced or open states) for the regulation mechanism of skeletal muscle contraction.  相似文献   

20.
Tropomyosin (Tm) binds along actin filaments, one molecule spanning four to seven actin monomers, depending on the isoform. Periodic repeats in the sequence have been proposed to correspond to actin binding sites. To learn the functional importance of length and the internal periods we made a series of progressively shorter Tms, deleting from two up to six of the internal periods from rat striated alpha-TM (dAc2--3, dAc2--4, dAc3--5, dAc2--5, dAc2--6, dAc1.5--6.5). Recombinant Tms (unacetylated) were expressed in Escherichia coli. Tropomyosins that are four or more periods long (dAc2--3, dAc2--4, and dAc3--5) bound well to F-actin with troponin (Tn). dAc2--5 bound weakly (with EGTA) and binding of shorter mutants was undetectable in any condition. Myosin S1-induced binding of Tm to actin in the tight Tm-binding "open" state did not correlate with actin binding. dAc3--5 and dAc2--5 did not bind to actin even when the filament was saturated with S1. In contrast, dAc2--3 and dAc2--4 did, like wild-type-Tm, requiring about 3 mol of S1/mol of Tm for half-maximal binding. The results show the critical importance of period 5 (residues 166--207) for myosin S1-induced binding. The Tms that bound to actin (dAc2--3, dAc2--4, and dAc3--5) all fully inhibited the actomyosin ATPase (+Tn) in EGTA. In the presence of Ca(2+), relief of inhibition by these Tms was incomplete. We conclude (1) four or more actin periods are required for Tm to bind to actin with reasonable affinity and (2) that the structural requirements of Tm for the transition of the regulated filament from the blocked-to-closed/open (relief of inhibition by Ca(2+)) and the closed-to-open states (strong Tm binding to actin-S1) are different.  相似文献   

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