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1.
We have developed a procedure to isolate, from skeletal muscle, enriched terminal cisternae of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), which retain morphologically intact junctional "feet" structures similar to those observed in situ. The fraction is largely devoid of transverse tubule, plasma membrane, mitochondria, triads (transverse tubules junctionally associated with terminal cisternae), and longitudinal cisternae, as shown by thin-section electron microscopy of representative samples. The terminal cisternae vesicles have distinctive morphological characteristics that differ from the isolated longitudinal cisternae (light SR) obtained from the same gradient. The terminal cisternae consist of two distinct types of membranes, i.e., the junctional face membrane and the Ca2+ pump protein-containing membrane, whereas the longitudinal cisternae contain only the Ca2+ pump protein-containing membrane. The junctional face membrane of the terminal cisternae contains feet structures that extend approximately 12 nm from the membrane surface and can be clearly visualized in thin section through using tannic acid enhancement, by negative staining and by freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Sections of the terminal cisternae, cut tangential to and intersecting the plane of the junctional face, reveal a checkerboardlike lattice of alternating, square-shaped feet structures and spaces each 20 nm square. Structures characteristic of the Ca2+ pump protein are not observed between the feet at the junctional face membrane, either in thin section or by negative staining, even though the Ca2+ pump protein is observed in the nonjunctional membrane on the remainder of the same vesicle. Likewise, freeze-fracture replicas reveal regions of the P face containing ropelike strands instead of the high density of the 7-8-nm particles referable to the Ca2+ pump protein. The intravesicular content of the terminal cisternae, mostly Ca2+-binding protein (calsequestrin), is organized in the form of strands, sometimes appearing paracrystalline, and attached to the inner face of the membrane in the vicinity of the junctional feet. The terminal cisternae preparation is distinct from previously described heavy SR fractions in that it contains the highest percentage of junctional face membrane with morphologically well-preserved junctional feet structures.  相似文献   

2.
This study is concerned with the characterization of the morphology of the calcium release channel of sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) from fast-twitch skeletal muscle, which is involved in excitation-contraction coupling. We have previously purified the ryanodine receptor and found it to be equivalent to the feet structures, which are involved, in situ, in the junctional association of transverse tubules with terminal cisternae of SR. The receptor is an oligomer of a single high molecular weight polypeptide and when incorporated into phospholipid bilayers, has channel conductance which is characteristic of calcium release in terminal cisternae of SR. The purified channel can be observed by electron microscopy using different methods of sample preparation, with complementary views being observed by negative staining, double staining, thin section and rotary shadowing electron microscopy. Three views can be observed and interpreted: (a) a square face which, in situ, is junctionally associated with the transverse tubule or junctional face membrane; (b) a rectangle equivalent to the side view; and (c) a diamond shape equivalent to the side view, of which the base portion appears to be equivalent to the transmembrane segment. Negative staining reveals detailed substructure of the channel. A computer averaged view of the receptor displays fourfold symmetry and ultrastructural detail. The dense central mass is divided into four domains with a 2-nm hole in the center, and is enclosed within an outer frame which has a pinwheel appearance. Double staining shows substructure of the square face in the form of parallel linear arrays (six/face). The features of the isolated receptor can be correlated with the structure observed in terminal cisternae vesicles. Sections tangential to the junctional face membrane reveal that the feet structures (23-nm squares) overlap so as to enclose smaller square spaces of approximately 14 nm/side. We suggest that this is equivalent to the transverse tubule face and that the terminal cisternae face is smaller (approximately 17 nm/face) and has larger alternating spaces as a consequence of the tapered sides of the foot structures. Image reconstruction analysis appears to be feasible and should provide the three-dimensional structure of the channel.  相似文献   

3.
A Chu  P Volpe  B Costello  S Fleischer 《Biochemistry》1986,25(25):8315-8324
Junctional terminal cisternae are a recently isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum fraction containing two types of membranes, the junctional face membrane with morphologically intact "feet" structures and the calcium pump membrane [Saito, A., Seiler, S., Chu, A., & Fleischer, S. (1984) J. Cell Biol. 99, 875-885]. In this study, the Ca2+ fluxes of junctional terminal cisternae are characterized and compared with three other well-defined fractions derived from the sarcotubular system of fast-twitch skeletal muscle, including light and heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum, corresponding to longitudinal and terminal cisternae regions of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, and isolated triads. Functionally, junctional terminal cisternae have low net energized Ca2+ transport measured in the presence or absence of a Ca2+-trapping anion, as compared to light and heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum and triads. Ca2+ transport and Ca2+ pumping efficiency can be restored to values similar to those of light sarcoplasmic reticulum with ruthenium red or high [Mg2+]. In contrast to junctional terminal cisternae, heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum and triads have higher Ca2+ transport and are stimulated less by ruthenium red. Heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum appears to be derived from the nonjunctional portion of the terminal cisternae. Our studies indicate that the decreased Ca2+ transport is referable to the enhanced permeability to Ca2+, reflecting the predominant localization of Ca2+ release channels in junctional terminal cisternae. This conclusion is based on the following observations: The Ca2+, -Mg2+ -dependent ATPase activity of junctional terminal cisternae in the presence of a Ca2+ ionophore is comparable to that of light sarcoplasmic reticulum when normalized for the calcium pump protein content; i.e., the enhanced Ca2+ transport cannot be explained by a faster turnover of the pump. Ruthenium red or elevated [Mg2+] enhances energized Ca2+ transport and Ca2+ pumping efficiency in junctional terminal cisternae so that values approaching those of light sarcoplasmic reticulum are obtained. Rapid Ca2+ efflux in junctional terminal cisternae can be directly measured and is blocked by ruthenium red or high [Mg2+]. Ryanodine at pharmacologically significant concentrations blocks the ruthenium red stimulation of Ca2+ loading. Ryanodine binding in junctional terminal cisternae, which appears to titrate Ca2+ release channels, is 2 orders of magnitude lower than the concentration of the calcium pump protein. By contrast, light sarcoplasmic reticulum has a high Ca2+ loading rate and slow Ca2+ efflux that are not modulated by ruthenium red, ryanodine, or Mg2+.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
In fast twitch skeletal muscle, the signal for excitation-contraction coupling is transferred from transverse tubule across the triad junction; calcium is thereby released from the terminal cisternae of sarcoplasmic reticulum triggering muscle contraction. Recently, the feet structures of terminal cisternae, which bridge the gap at the triad junction, have been identified as the ryanodine receptor and in turn with the calcium release channels of sarcoplasmic reticulum. The latter consists of an oligomer of a single high molecular weight polypeptide (Mr 360,000). This study attempts to identify the component in the transverse tubule which ligands with the foot structure to form the triad junction. The purified ryanodine receptor, derivatized with sulfosuccinimidyl-2-(p-azidosalicylimido)-1,3'-dithiopropionate (SASD), a thiol-cleavable, 125I-iodinatable, and photoactive probe, was shown to selectively cross-link to a protein with Mr of 71,000 in isolated transverse tubules. This coupling protein was purified from transverse tubule by solubilization with the detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propane sulfonate (CHAPS) and then purified by sequential column chromatography. In the absence of sulfhydryl agents, the purified polypeptide has an Mr of 61,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A complementary approach using SASD was employed to confirm association of the coupling protein with the ryanodine receptor of terminal cisternae. We conclude that the transverse tubule coupling protein together with the ryanodine receptor (foot structure) is involved in the liganding between transverse tubule and terminal cisternae of sacroplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

5.
Cryoelectron microscopy and tomography have been applied for the first time to isolated, frozen-hydrated skeletal muscle triad junctions (triads) and terminal cisternae (TC) vesicles derived from sarcoplasmic reticulum. Isolated triads were selected on the basis of their appearance as two spherical TC vesicles attached to opposite sides of a flattened vesicle derived from a transverse tubule (TT). Foot structures (ryanodine receptors) were resolved within the gap between the TC vesicles and TT vesicles, and some residual ordering of the receptors into arrays was apparent. Organized dense layers, apparently containing the calcium-binding protein calsequestrin, were found in the lumen of TC vesicles underlying the foot structures. The lamellar regions did not directly contact the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane, thereby creating an approximately 5-nm-thick zone that potentially constitutes a subcompartment for achieving locally elevated [Ca(2+) ] in the immediate vicinity of the Ca(2+)-conducting ryanodine receptors. The lumen of the TT vesicles contained globular mass densities of unknown origin, some of which form cross-bridges that may be responsible for the flattened appearance of the transverse tubules when viewed in cross-section. The spatial relationships among the TT membrane, ryanodine receptors, and calsequestrin-containing assemblage are revealed under conditions that do not use dehydration, heavy-metal staining, or chemical fixation, thus exemplifying the potential of cryoelectron microscopy and tomography to reveal structural detail of complex subcellular structures.  相似文献   

6.
The membrane systems of skeletal muscle were examined after tannic acid fixation. A new structure consisting of bridges spanning the junctional gap is described, and a model is proposed in which the cytoplasmic but not the luminal membrane leaflets of the transverse tubule and of the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) are continuous. The globular particles (presumably the Ca-binding proteins) within the terminal cisternae were arranged in longitudinal rows and appeared adherent to the junctional membrane. The junctional gap was present in negatively stained, frozen thin sections of fixed muscles. Negatively staining material occured within the junctional gap. The cytoplasmic leaflets of the longitudinal, intermediate, and terminal cisterna regions of the SR exhibited a thick coat of densely staining material compatible with the presence of the Ca-ATPase. Similar bridges were also observed at the surface membrane-SR close coupling sites of vascular smooth muscle.  相似文献   

7.
Tannic acid mordanting during fixation of isolated vesicles from skeletal muscle enhanced the resolution of the images. Isolated triadic junctions displayed two characteristic features not previously described: (a) a clear gap separated terminal cisternae from transverse tubules; (b) this gap was bridged by a separating array of structures which resembled the "feet" of intact muscle. When the triad was broken in a French press and subsequently reassembled by joining the two organelles, a similar gap was seen but the structure of the feet was less well defined. When the membrane of the triad was extracted by Triton X-100, the junctional region was retained and a similar gap between the two organelles could be discerned. The terminal cisternae characteristically displayed a thickening of the cytoplasmic leaflet of the membrane in select areas in which electron-dense material was apposed on the luminal leaflet. This thickened membrane was not observed in longitudinal reticulum or in terminal cisternae regions distal to the electron-dense matter. This thickened leaflet was not invariably associated with the junction, and some junctional regions did not display discernible thickening of the membrane. When the triad was treated with KCl, the electron-dense aggregate was dispersed and the thickened leaflet of the terminal cisternae dissipated, whereas the triadic junctional region with its feet remained unchanged. KCl treatment caused dissolution of three proteins of Mr = 77,000, 43,000, and 38,000. Treatment of Triton-resistant vesicles with KCl caused the loss of electron-dense aggregate but did not otherwise influence the appearance of the junction. A good degree of correlation both qualitatively and in quantitative parameters between the isolated vesicles and the intact muscle was observed.  相似文献   

8.
The structure of the junction between sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and transverse tubular (T) system at the triad has been studied in twitch fibers of the frog. The junction is formed by flattened surfaces of the SR lateral sacs and the T-system tubule, which face each other at a distance of 120–140 A. At periodic intervals of about 300 A, the SR membrane forms small projections, whose tips are joined to the T system membrane by some amorphous material. The SR projections and the amorphous material are here called SR feet. The feet are disposed in two parallel rows, two such rows being present on either side of the T-system tubule. The junctional area between the feet is apparently empty. The feet cover no more than 30% of the T system surface area and 3% of the total SR area. The functional significance of this interpretation of the junctional structure is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
《The Journal of cell biology》1988,107(6):2587-2600
The architecture of the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and transverse tubule (T tubule) membranes and the morphology of the two major proteins isolated from these membranes, the ryanodine receptor (or foot protein) and the dihydropyridine receptor, have been examined in detail. Evidence for a direct interaction between the foot protein and a protein component of the junctional T tubule membrane is presented. Comparisons between freeze-fracture images of the junctional SR and rotary-shadowed images of isolated triads and of the isolated foot protein, show that the foot protein has two domains. One is the large hydrophilic foot which spans the junctional gap and is composed of four subunits. The other is a hydrophobic domain which presumably forms the SR Ca2+-release channel and which also has a fourfold symmetry. Freeze-fracture images of the junctional T tubule membranes demonstrate the presence of diamond-shaped clusters of particles that correspond exactly in position to the subunits of the feet protein. These results suggest the presence of a large junctional complex spanning the two junctional membranes and intervening gap. This junctional complex is an ideal candidate for a mechanical coupling hypothesis of excitation-contraction coupling at the triadic junction.  相似文献   

10.
The ryanodine receptor has been purified from junctional terminal cisternae of fast skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). The ryanodine receptor was solubilized with 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (CHAPS) and stabilized by addition of phospholipids. The solubilized receptor showed the same [3H]ryanodine binding properties as the original SR vesicles in terms of affinity, Ca2+ dependence, and salt dependence. Purification of the ryanodine receptor was performed by sequential column chromatography on heparin-agarose and hydroxylapatite in the presence of CHAPS. The purified receptor bound 393 +/- 65 pmol of ryanodine/mg of protein (mean +/- S.E., n = 5). The purified receptor showed three bands on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with Mr of 360,000, 330,000, and 175,000. Densitometry indicates that these are present in the ratio of 2/1/1, suggesting a monomer Mr of 1.225 X 10(6) and supported by gel exclusion chromatography in CHAPS. Electron microscopy of the purified preparation showed the square shape of 210 A characteristic of and comparable in size and shape to the feet structures of junctional terminal cisternae of SR, indicating that ryanodine binds directly to the feet structures. From the ryanodine binding data, the stoichiometry between ryanodine binding sites to the number of feet structures is estimated to be about 2. Since the ryanodine receptor is coupled to Ca2+ gating, the present finding suggests that the ryanodine receptor and Ca2+ release channel represent a functional unit, the structural unit being the foot structure which, in situ, is junctionally associated with the transverse tubules. It is across this triad junction that the signal for Ca2+ release is expressed. Thus, the foot structure appears to directly respond to the signal from transverse tubules, causing the release of Ca2+ from the junctional face membrane of the terminal cisternae of SR.  相似文献   

11.
F Zorzato  A Chu    P Volpe 《The Biochemical journal》1989,261(3):863-870
The junctional face membrane plays a key role in excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle. A protein of 350 kDa, tentatively identified as a component of the junctional feet, connects transverse tubules to terminal cisternae of sarcoplasmic reticulum [Kawamoto, Brunschwig, Kim & Caswell (1986) J. Cell Biol. 103, 1405-1414]. The membrane topology and protein composition of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-release channels of rabbit skeletal muscle were investigated using an immunological approach, with anti-(junctional face membrane) and anti-(350 kDa protein) polyclonal antibodies. Upon preincubation of the terminal cisternae with anti-(junctional face membrane) antibodies, Ca2+-ATPase and Ca2+-loading activities were not affected, whereas anti-(350 kDa protein) antibodies stimulated Ca2+-ATPase activity by 25% and inhibited Ca2+-loading activity by 50% (at an antibody/terminal cisternae protein ratio of 1:1). Specific photolabelling of terminal cisternae proteins with [14C]doxorubicin was prevented by both anti-(junctional face membrane) and anti-(350 kDa protein) antibodies. Stimulation of Ca2+ release by doxorubicin was prevented by both anti-(junctional face membrane) and anti-(350 kDa protein) antibodies. Half-maximal inhibition was obtained at an antibody/terminal cisternae protein ratio of 1:1. Kinetic measurements of Ca2+ release indicated that anti-(350 kDa protein) antibodies prevented Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release, whereas the ATP-stimulation and the inhibition by Mg2+ were not affected. These results suggest that: (i) Ca2+- and doxorubicin-induced Ca2+ release is mediated by Ca2+ channels which are selectively localized in the junctional face membrane; (ii) the 350 kDa protein is a component of the Ca2+-release channel in native terminal cisternae vesicles; and (iii) the Ca2+-activating site of the channel is separate from other allosteric sites.  相似文献   

12.
We have recently described a preparation of junctional terminal cisternae (JTC) from fast skeletal muscle of rabbit hind leg. The fraction differs from other heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) fractions in that it contains a substantial amount of junctional face membrane (JFM) (15-20% of the membrane) with morphologically well-defined junctional feet structures. In common with other heavy SR preparations, it contains predominantly the calcium pump membrane (80-85% of the membrane) and compartmental contents (CC), consisting mainly of calcium-binding protein (calsequestrin). In this study, a modified procedure for the preparation of JTC from frozen rabbit back muscle is described. The yield is substantially greater (threefold per weight of muscle), yet retaining characteristics similar to JTC from fresh hind leg muscles. Methodology has been developed for the disassembly of the JTC. This is achieved by selectively extracting the calcium pump membrane with 0.5% Triton X-100 in the presence of 1 mM CaCl2 to yield a complex of JFM with CC. The CC are then solubilized in the presence of EDTA to yield JFM. This fraction contains unidirectionally aligned junctional feet structures protruding from the cytoplasmic face of the membrane with repeat spacings comparable to that observed in JTC. The JFM contains 0.16 mumol phosphorus (lipid) per milligram protein. Characteristic proteins include 340 and 79-kD bands, a doublet at 28 kD, and a component that migrates somewhat slower than or equivalent to the calcium pump protein. Approximately 10% of the calcium-binding protein remains bound to the JFM after EDTA extraction, indicating the presence of a specific binding component in the JFM. The JFM, which is involved in junctional association with transverse tubule and likely in the Ca2+ release process in excitation-contraction coupling, is now available in the test tube.  相似文献   

13.
Polyclonal antibodies to dystrophin (the protein product of the human Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene) were used to identify and characterize dystrophin in isolated triads from rabbit skeletal muscle. Anti-dystrophin antibodies recognize an approximately 400,000-Da protein in isolated triads or heavy microsomes from skeletal muscle. Treatment of heavy microsomes with buffers containing high salt or EDTA to remove peripheral or extrinsic membrane proteins does not remove dystrophin; however, treatment of intact triads with trypsin shows that dystrophin is extremely sensitive to mild proteolytic digestion. Isolation of junctional complexes from skeletal muscle triads indicates that dystrophin is tightly associated with the triadic junction. Fractionation of the triadic junction into junctional transverse tubular membranes and junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes has shown that dystrophin is enriched in junctional transverse tubular membranes. Thus, our results suggest that dystrophin is a component of the triad junction which is exposed to the cytoplasm and embedded in or attached to the transverse tubular membrane.  相似文献   

14.
The high affinity ryanodine receptor of the Ca2+ release channel from junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum of rabbit skeletal muscle has been identified and characterized using monoclonal antibodies. Anti-ryanodine receptor monoclonal antibody XA7 specifically immunoprecipitated [3H]ryanodine-labeled receptor from digitonin-solubilized triads in a dose-dependent manner. [3H]Ryanodine binding to the immunoprecipitated receptor from unlabeled digitonin-solubilized triads was specific, Ca2+-dependent, stimulated by millimolar ATP, and inhibited by micromolar ruthenium red. Indirect immunoperoxidase staining of nitrocellulose blots of various skeletal muscle membrane fractions has demonstrated that anti-ryanodine receptor monoclonal antibody XA7 recognizes a high molecular weight protein (approximately 350,000 Da) which is enriched in isolated triads but absent from light sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles and transverse tubular membrane vesicles. Thus, our results demonstrate that monoclonal antibodies to the approximately 350,000-Da junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum protein immunoprecipitated the ryanodine receptor with properties identical to those expected for the ryanodine receptor of the Ca2+ release channel.  相似文献   

15.
We have examined the structure of calsequestrin in three-dimensional images from deep-etched rotary-replicated freeze fractures of skeletal muscle fibers. We selected a fast-acting muscle because the sarcoplasmic reticulum has an orderly disposition and is rich in internal membranes. Calsequestrin forms a network in the center of the terminal cisternae and is anchored to the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane, with preference for the junctional portion. The anchorage is responsible for maintaining calsequestrin in the region of the sarcoplasmic reticulum close to the calcium-release channels, and it corroborates the finding that calsequestrin and the spanning protein of the junctional feet may interact with each other in the junctional membrane. Anchoring filaments may be composed of a protein other than calsequestrin.  相似文献   

16.
We report here the presence of an NADPH oxidase (NOX) activity both in intact and in isolated transverse tubules and in triads isolated from mammalian skeletal muscle, as established by immunochemical, enzymatic, and pharmacological criteria. Immunohistochemical determinations with NOX antibodies showed that the gp91(phox) membrane subunit and the cytoplasmic regulatory p47(phox) subunit co-localized in transverse tubules of adult mice fibers with the alpha1s subunit of dihydropyridine receptors. Western blot analysis revealed that isolated triads contained the integral membrane subunits gp91(phox) and p22(phox), which were markedly enriched in isolated transverse tubules but absent from junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles. Isolated triads and transverse tubules, but not junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum, also contained varying amounts of the cytoplasmic NOX regulatory subunits p47(phox) and p67(phox). NADPH or NADH elicited superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide generation by isolated triads; both activities were inhibited by NOX inhibitors but not by rotenone. NADH diminished the total thiol content of triads by one-third; catalase or apocynin, a NOX inhibitor, prevented this effect. NADPH enhanced the activity of ryanodine receptor type 1 (RyR1) in triads, measured through [3H]ryanodine binding and calcium release kinetics, and increased significantly RyR1 S-glutathionylation over basal levels. Preincubation with reducing agents or NOX inhibitors abolished the enhancement of RyR1 activity produced by NADPH and prevented NADPH-induced RyR1 S-glutathionylation. We propose that reactive oxygen species generated by the transverse tubule NOX activate via redox modification the neighboring RyR1 Ca2+ release channels. Possible implications of this putative mechanism for skeletal muscle function are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
The ultrastructural localization of the Ca2+ + Mg2+-dependent ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum in rat gracilis muscle was determined by indirect immunoferritin labeling of ultrathin frozen sections. Simultaneous visualization of ferritin particles and of adsorption- stained cellular membranes showed that the Ca2+ + Mg2+-ATPase was concentrated in the longitudinal sarcoplasmic reticulum and in the nonjunctional regions of the terminal cisternae membrane but was virtually absent from mitochondria, plasma membranes, transverse tubules, and junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum. Ferritin particles were found preponderantly on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane, in agreement with published data showing an asymmetry of the Ca2+ + Mg2+- ATPase within the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane. Comparison of the density of ferritin particles in fast and slow myofibers suggested that the density of the Ca2+ + Mg2+-ATPase in the sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane in a fast myofiber is approximately two times higher than in a slow myofiber.  相似文献   

18.
Light and heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles were isolated from rabbit leg muscle using a combination of differential centrifugation and isophycnic zonal ultracentrifugation. Light sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles obtained from the 30–32.5% and heavy sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles obtained from the 38.5–42% sucrose regions of the linear sucrose gradient were determined to be free of surface and mitochondrial membrane contamination by marker enzyme analysis and electron microscopy. Thin sections of the light vesicles revealed empty vesicles of various sizes and shapes. Freeze-fracture replicas of the light vesicles showed an asymmetric distribution of intramembranous particles with the same orientation and distribution as the longitudinal sarcoplasmic reticulum in vivo. Heavy vesicles appeared as rounded vesicles of uniform size filled with electron dense material, similar to that seen in the terminal cisternae of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The cytoplasmic surface of the membrane was decorated by membrane projections, closely resembling the ‘feet’ which join the sarcoplasmic reticulum to the transverse tubules in the intact muscle fiber. Freeze-fracture replicas of the heavy vesicles revealed an asymmetric distribution of particles which in some areas of the vesicle's surface are larger and less densely aggregated than those of the light vesicles. In the best quality replicas, some regions of the luminal leaflet were not smooth but showed evidence of pits. These structural details are characteristic of the area of sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane which is covered by the ‘feet’ in the intact muscle.Heavy vesicles contained greater than six times the calcium content of light vesicles, 54 vs. 9 nmol Ca2+/μl of water space. After KCl washing both contained less than 4 nmol Ca2+/μl of water space. Although they transported at the same rate and the same total amount of calcium, the rate of passive Ca2+ efflux from the heavy vesicles was double that of light vesicles. The higher rate of calcium efflux from the heavy vesicles was inhibited by dantrolene, an inhibitor of Ca2+ release. High resolution sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis showed that the light vesicles contained predominantly Ca2+-ATPase along with several approx. 55 000-dalton proteins and a 5000-dalton proteolipid, while the heavy vesicles contained Ca2+-ATPase and calsequestrin along with several approx. 55 000-dalton proteins, extrinsic 34 000- and 38 000-dalton proteins, intrinsic 30 000- and 33 000-dalton proteins and two proteolipids of 5000 and 9000 daltons. KCl washing of the heavy vesicles removed both the approx. 34 000- and 38 000-dalton proteins, and the ‘sarcoplasmic reticulum feet’ were no longer seen on the heavy vesicles. The KCl supernatant was enriched in the 34 000- and 38 000-dalton proteins, indicating that these proteins are possible components of the sarcoplasmic reticulum feet. The biochemical and morphological data strongly support the view that the light vesicles are derived from the longitudinal sarcoplasmic reticulum and that the heavy vesicles are derived from the terminal cisternae containing junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum membrane with the intact ‘sarcoplasmic reticulum feet’.  相似文献   

19.
Summary It has been previously recognized that a number of protocols may cause breakage of the triad junction and separation of the constituent organelles of skeletal muscle. We now describe a fraction of triad junctions which is refractory to the known protocols for disruption. Triads were passed through a French press and the dissociated organelles were separated on a sucrose density gradient, which was assayed for PN200-110, ouabain and ryanodine binding. Ryanodine binding showed a single peak at the density of heavy terminal cisternae. On the other hand, the PN200-110 and ouabain, which are external membrane ligands, bound in two peaks: one at the free transverse tubule region and the other at the light terminal cisternae. Similarly, a two peak pattern of PN200-110 and ouabain binding was observed when triad junctions were broken by the Ca2+-dependent protease, calpain, which selectively hydrolyzes the junctional foot protein. The light terminal cisternae vesicles were subjected to three different procedures of junctional breakage: French press, hypertonic salt treatment, and protease digestion using calpain or trypsin. The treated membranes were then centrifuged on density gradients. Only extensive trypsin digestion caused a partial shift of ouabain activity into the free transverse tubule region. These observations suggest that the triads are a composite mixture of breakage susceptible, weak, and breakage resistant, strong, triads. Scatchard analysis of PN200-110 suggests that the transverse tubules of strong triads contain a relatively high number of dihydropyridine receptors compared to those of weak triads. Thin section electron microscopic images of the strong triads comparable to those of intact muscle are presented.  相似文献   

20.
Ryanodine modulates Ca2+ permeability in isolated terminal cisternae of sarcoplasmic reticulum, suggesting that it is a specific ligand for the calcium release channel. Our laboratory has purified the ryanodine receptor and demonstrated it to be equivalent to the feet structures, which are involved in the junctional association of the transverse tubule with the terminal cisternae. Recently, Smith, Coronado and Meissner have incorporated sarcoplasmic reticulum into bilayers and found a high conductivity channel (approximately .100 pS) which has a number of characteristics expected of the Ca2+ release channels in SR. We now find that the high conductivity channel in the bilayer is sensitive to ryanodine. Low concentrations of ryanodine (sub microM): (1) lock the channels in an open state; (2) prevent the action of ruthenium red (microM) to completely close the channel; and (3) much higher concentrations of ryanodine (300 microM) close the channel. In these three respects ryanodine acts similarly on the channel in the bilayer as in vesicles. Further, the bilayer studies provide new insight into the action of ryanodine on the channel in that: (1) ryanodine locks the channel in the open state, but the conductivity is reduced to about 40%; (2) ryanodine prevents ruthenium red from closing the channel, although there is a further decrease in the open current. These studies provide support that the high conductivity calcium channel in sarcoplasmic reticulum is involved in excitation-contraction coupling. By the same token the pharmacological action of ryanodine is pinpointed to the calcium release channel.  相似文献   

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