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1.
Muscle contracts due to ATP-dependent interactions of myosin motors with thin filaments composed of the proteins actin, troponin, and tropomyosin. Contraction is initiated when calcium binds to troponin, which changes conformation and displaces tropomyosin, a filamentous protein that wraps around the actin filament, thereby exposing myosin binding sites on actin. Myosin motors interact with each other indirectly via tropomyosin, since myosin binding to actin locally displaces tropomyosin and thereby facilitates binding of nearby myosin. Defining and modeling this local coupling between myosin motors is an open problem in muscle modeling and, more broadly, a requirement to understanding the connection between muscle contraction at the molecular and macro scale. It is challenging to directly observe this coupling, and such measurements have only recently been made. Analysis of these data suggests that two myosin heads are required to activate the thin filament. This result contrasts with a theoretical model, which reproduces several indirect measurements of coupling between myosin, that assumes a single myosin head can activate the thin filament. To understand this apparent discrepancy, we incorporated the model into stochastic simulations of the experiments, which generated simulated data that were then analyzed identically to the experimental measurements. By varying a single parameter, good agreement between simulation and experiment was established. The conclusion that two myosin molecules are required to activate the thin filament arises from an assumption, made during data analysis, that the intensity of the fluorescent tags attached to myosin varies depending on experimental condition. We provide an alternative explanation that reconciles theory and experiment without assuming that the intensity of the fluorescent tags varies.  相似文献   

2.
Tropomyosin (Tm) is one of the major phosphoproteins comprising the thin filament of muscle. However, the specific role of Tm phosphorylation in modulating the mechanics of actomyosin interaction has not been determined. Here we show that Tm phosphorylation is necessary for long-range cooperative activation of myosin binding. We used a novel optical trapping assay to measure the isometric stall force of an ensemble of myosin molecules moving actin filaments reconstituted with either natively phosphorylated or dephosphorylated Tm. The data show that the thin filament is cooperatively activated by myosin across regulatory units when Tm is phosphorylated. When Tm is dephosphorylated, this "long-range" cooperative activation is lost and the filament behaves identically to bare actin filaments. However, these effects are not due to dissociation of dephosphorylated Tm from the reconstituted thin filament. The data suggest that end-to-end interactions of adjacent Tm molecules are strengthened when Tm is phosphorylated, and that phosphorylation is thus essential for long range cooperative activation along the thin filament.  相似文献   

3.
Striated muscle thin filaments contain many troponin molecules, which contact each other indirectly via tropomyosin and actin. Such allosteric interactions between troponin molecules may be responsible for cooperative Ca2+ binding to the regulatory sites of the cardiac thin filament (Tobacman, L. S., and Sawyer, D. S. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 931-939). To test whether thin filament-bound troponin molecules interact, we studied the competitive binding of troponin and troponin T-troponin I (an inhibitory complex lacking the Ca2+ binding subunit troponin C) to actin-tropomyosin. The relative affinities of these two forms of troponin for the thin filament depended upon their relative concentrations. Under conditions where total binding was saturated, each form binds with greater apparent affinity to sites that have similar neighbors. A theoretical model for competitive binding of two ligands to interacting sites on a linear lattice was developed and fit to the data. Surprisingly, energetically unfavorable interactions occurred between adjacent troponin and troponin T-troponin I molecules not only in the presence of Ca2+, but also in the presence of [ethylenebis(oxyethylenenitrilo)]tetraacetic acid and/or myosin subfragment 1. Removal of Ca2+ strengthened the affinity of troponin for the thin filament less than 50%. These results suggest that, even in the absence of myosin, long range allosteric interactions occur between troponin molecules. The detailed involvement of tropomyosin and actin in these interactions remains to be established.  相似文献   

4.
Striated muscle contraction is a highly cooperative process initiated by Ca2+ binding to the troponin complex, which leads to tropomyosin movement and myosin cross-bridge (XB) formation along thin filaments. Experimental and computational studies suggest skeletal muscle fiber activation is greatly augmented by cooperative interactions between neighboring thin filament regulatory units (RU-RU cooperativity; 1 RU = 7 actin monomers+1 troponin complex+1 tropomyosin molecule). XB binding can also amplify thin filament activation through interactions with RUs (XB-RU cooperativity). Because these interactions occur with a temporal order, they can be considered kinetic forms of cooperativity. Our previous spatially-explicit models illustrated that mechanical forms of cooperativity also exist, arising from XB-induced XB binding (XB-XB cooperativity). These mechanical and kinetic forms of cooperativity are likely coordinated during muscle contraction, but the relative contribution from each of these mechanisms is difficult to separate experimentally. To investigate these contributions we built a multi-filament model of the half sarcomere, allowing RU activation kinetics to vary with the state of neighboring RUs or XBs. Simulations suggest Ca2+ binding to troponin activates a thin filament distance spanning 9 to 11 actins and coupled RU-RU interactions dominate the cooperative force response in skeletal muscle, consistent with measurements from rabbit psoas fibers. XB binding was critical for stabilizing thin filament activation, particularly at submaximal Ca2+ levels, even though XB-RU cooperativity amplified force less than RU-RU cooperativity. Similar to previous studies, XB-XB cooperativity scaled inversely with lattice stiffness, leading to slower rates of force development as stiffness decreased. Including RU-RU and XB-RU cooperativity in this model resulted in the novel prediction that the force-[Ca2+] relationship can vary due to filament and XB compliance. Simulations also suggest kinetic forms of cooperativity occur rapidly and dominate early to get activation, while mechanical forms of cooperativity act more slowly, augmenting XB binding as force continues to develop.  相似文献   

5.
Contraction of striated muscle is tightly regulated by the release and sequestration of calcium within myocytes. At the molecular level, calcium modulates myosin''s access to the thin filament. Once bound, myosin is hypothesized to potentiate the binding of further myosins. Here, we directly image single molecules of myosin binding to and activating thin filaments. Using this approach, the cooperative binding of myosin along thin filaments has been quantified. We have found that two myosin heads are required to laterally activate a regulatory unit of thin filament. The regulatory unit is found to be capable of accommodating 11 additional myosins. Three thin filament activation states possessing differential myosin binding capacities are also visible. To describe this system, we have formulated a simple chemical kinetic model of cooperative activation that holds across a wide range of solution conditions. The stochastic nature of activation is strongly highlighted by data obtained in sub-optimal activation conditions where the generation of activation waves and their catastrophic collapse can be observed. This suggests that the thin filament has the potential to be turned fully on or off in a binary fashion.  相似文献   

6.
The regulatory protein system in the skeletal muscle thin filaments is known to exhibit three discrete states, called "off" or "blocked" (no Ca2+), "on" or "closed" (with Ca2+ alone) and "potentiated" or "open" (with strongly bound myosin head) states. Biochemical studies have shown that only weak interactions with myosin are allowed in the second state. Characterization of each state is often difficult, because the equilibria among these states are readily shifted by experimental conditions. To overcome this problem, we chemically cross-linked the skeletal muscle thin filament in the three states with the zero-length cross-linker 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (EDC), in overstretched muscle fibers. The state of the regulatory proteins was monitored by measuring the intensity of the second actin layer-line (2nd LL) reflection in X-ray diffraction patterns. Structurally, the thin filaments cross-linked in the three states exhibited three corresponding discrete levels of 2nd LL intensities, which were not Ca2+-sensitive any more. Functionally, the thin filament cross-linked in the "off-blocked" state inhibited strong interaction with myosin head (subgfragment-1 or S1). The thin filament cross-linked in the "potentiated-open" state allowed strong interaction and full ATPase activity of S1 as described previously. The thin filament cross-linked in the "on-closed" state allowed strong interactions with S1 and actin-activated ATPase without enhancing the 2nd LL to the level of "potentiated-open" state, contrary to the expectations from the biochemical studies. The results demonstrate the potential of EDC as a tool for studying the states of calcium regulation, and the apparent uncoupling between the 2nd LL intensity and the function provides a new insight into the mechanism of thin filament regulation.  相似文献   

7.
Regulation of muscle contraction is a very cooperative process. The presence of tropomyosin on the thin filament is both necessary and sufficient for cooperativity to occur. Data recently obtained with various tropomyosin isoforms and mutants help us to understand better the structural requirements in the thin filament for cooperative protein interactions. Forming an end-to-end overlap between neighboring tropomyosin molecules is not necessary for the cooperativity of the thin filament activation. When direct contacts between tropomyosin molecules are disrupted, the conformational changes in the filament are most probably transmitted cooperatively through actin subunits, although the exact nature of these changes is not known. The function of tropomyosin ends, alternatively expressed in various isoforms, is to confer specific actin affinity. Tropomyosin's affinity or actin is directly related to the size of the apparent cooperative unit defined as the number of actin subunits turned into the active state by binding of one myosin head. Inner sequences of tropomyosin, particularly actin-binding periods 3 to 5, play crucial role in myosin-induced activation of the thin filament. A plausible mechanism of tropomyosin function in this process is that inner tropomyosin regions are either specifically recognized by myosin or they define the right actin conformation required for tropomyosin movement from its blocking position.  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the relationship between thin filament Ca2+ binding and activation of the MgATPase rate of myosin subfragment 1, native cardiac thin filaments were isolated and characterized. Direct measurements of 45Ca binding to the thin filament were consistent with non-cooperative binding to two high affinity sites (Ka 7.3 +/- 0.8 x 10(6) M-1) and either cooperative or non-cooperative binding to one low affinity site (Ka 4 +/- 2 x 10(5) M-1) per troponin at 25 degrees C, 30 mM ionic strength, pH 7.06. Addition of a low concentration of myosin subfragment 1 to the native thin filaments produced a Ca2+-regulated MgATPase activity with Kapp (2.5 +/- 1.3 x 10(5) M-1), matching the low affinity Ca2+ site. The MgATPase rate was cooperatively activated by Ca2+ (Hill coefficient 1.8). To determine whether Ca2+ binding to the low affinity sites was cooperative, native thin filament troponin was exchanged with troponin labeled on troponin C with 2-(4'-iodoacetamidanilo)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid. From the Ca2+-sensitive fluorescence of this complex, Ca2+ binding was cooperative with a Hill coefficient of 1.7-2.0. Using the troponin-exchanged thin filaments, myosin subfragment 1 MgATPase rate activation was also cooperative and closely proportional to Ca2+ thin filament binding. Reconstitution of the thin filament from its components raised the Ca2+ affinity by a factor of 2 (compared with native thin filaments) and incorporation of fluorescently modified troponin raised the Ca2+ affinity by another factor of 2. Stoichiometrically reconstituted thin filaments produced non-cooperative MgATPase rate activation, contrasting with cooperative activation with native thin filaments, troponin-exchanged thin filaments and thin filaments reconstituted with a stoichiometric excess of troponin. The Ca2+-induced fluorescence transition of stoichiometrically reconstituted thin filaments was non-cooperative. These results suggest that Ca2+ binds cooperatively to the regulatory sites of the cardiac thin filament, even in the absence of myosin, and even though cardiac troponin C has only one Ca2+-specific binding site. A theoretical model for these observations is described and related to the experimental data. Well-known interactions between neighboring troponin-tropomyosin complexes are the proposed source of cooperativity and also influence the overall Ka. The data indicate that Ca2+ is four times more likely to elongate a sequence of troponin-tropomyosin units already binding Ca2+ than to bind to a site interior to a sequence of units without Ca2+.  相似文献   

9.
Electron microscopy has been used to study the structural changes that occur in the myosin filaments of tarantula striated muscle when they are phosphorylated. Myosin filaments in muscle homogenates maintained in relaxing conditions (ATP, EGTA) are found to have nonphosphorylated regulatory light chains as shown by urea/glycerol gel electrophoresis and [32P]phosphate autoradiography. Negative staining reveals an ordered, helical arrangement of crossbridges in these filaments, in which the heads from axially neighboring myosin molecules appear to interact with each other. When the free Ca2+ concentration in a homogenate is raised to 10(-4) M, or when a Ca2+-insensitive myosin light chain kinase is added at low Ca2+ (10(-8) M), the regulatory light chains of myosin become rapidly phosphorylated. Phosphorylation is accompanied by potentiation of the actin activation of the myosin Mg-ATPase activity and by loss of order of the helical crossbridge arrangement characteristic of the relaxed filament. We suggest that in the relaxed state, when the regulatory light chains are not phosphorylated, the myosin heads are held down on the filament backbone by head-head interactions or by interactions of the heads with the filament backbone. Phosphorylation of the light chains may alter these interactions so that the crossbridges become more loosely associated with the filament backbone giving rise to the observed changes and facilitating crossbridge interaction with actin.  相似文献   

10.
Smooth muscle thin filaments are made up of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and a Ca(2+)-binding protein and their interaction with myosin is Ca(2+)-regulated. We suggested that Ca(2+) regulation by caldesmon and Ca(2+)-calmodulin is achieved by controlling the state of thin filament through a cooperative-allosteric mechanism homologous to troponin-tropomyosin in striated muscles. In the present work, we have tested this hypothesis. We monitored directly the thin filament transition between the ON and OFF state using the excimer fluorescence of pyrene iodoacetamide (PIA)-labeled smooth muscle alphaalpha-tropomyosin homodimers. In steady state fluorescence measurements, myosin subfragment 1 (S1) cooperatively switches the thin filaments to the ON state, and this is exhibited as an increase in the excimer fluorescence. In contrast, caldesmon decreases the excimer fluorescence, indicating a switch of the thin filament to the OFF state. Addition of Ca(2+)-calmodulin increases the excimer fluorescence, indicating a switch of the thin filament to the ON state. The excimer fluorescence was also used to monitor the kinetics of the ON-OFF transition in a stopped-flow apparatus. When ATP induces S1 dissociation from actin-PIA-tropomyosin, the transition to the OFF state is delayed until all S1 molecules are dissociated actin. In contrast, caldesmon switches the thin filament to the OFF state in a cooperative way, and no lag is displayed in the time course of the caldesmon-induced fluorescence decrease. We have also studied caldesmon and Ca(2+)-calmodulin-caldesmon binding to actin-tropomyosin in the ON and OFF states. The results are used to discuss both caldesmon inhibition and Ca(2+)-calmodulin-caldesmon activation of actin-tropomyosin.  相似文献   

11.
Muscle contraction involves the interaction of the myosin heads of the thick filaments with actin subunits of the thin filaments. Relaxation occurs when this interaction is blocked by molecular switches on these filaments. In many muscles, myosin-linked regulation involves phosphorylation of the myosin regulatory light chains (RLCs). Electron microscopy of vertebrate smooth muscle myosin molecules (regulated by phosphorylation) has provided insight into the relaxed structure, revealing that myosin is switched off by intramolecular interactions between its two heads, the free head and the blocked head. Three-dimensional reconstruction of frozen-hydrated specimens revealed that this asymmetric head interaction is also present in native thick filaments of tarantula striated muscle. Our goal in this study was to elucidate the structural features of the tarantula filament involved in phosphorylation-based regulation. A new reconstruction revealed intra- and intermolecular myosin interactions in addition to those seen previously. To help interpret the interactions, we sequenced the tarantula RLC and fitted an atomic model of the myosin head that included the predicted RLC atomic structure and an S2 (subfragment 2) crystal structure to the reconstruction. The fitting suggests one intramolecular interaction, between the cardiomyopathy loop of the free head and its own S2, and two intermolecular interactions, between the cardiac loop of the free head and the essential light chain of the blocked head and between the Leu305-Gln327 interaction loop of the free head and the N-terminal fragment of the RLC of the blocked head. These interactions, added to those previously described, would help switch off the thick filament. Molecular dynamics simulations suggest how phosphorylation could increase the helical content of the RLC N-terminus, weakening these interactions, thus releasing both heads and activating the thick filament.  相似文献   

12.
The structure of smooth muscle thin filament was examined by various electron microscopy techniques, with special attention to the mode of caldesmon binding. Chemical cross-linking was positively used to avoid the dissociation of accessory proteins upon dilution. Caldesmon in reconstituted thin filament was observed as fine filamentous projections from thin filament. Native thin filament isolated from smooth muscle showed similarly numerous fine whisker-like projections by all the techniques employed here. Antibody against the amino-terminus of caldesmon labeled the end of such projections indicating the possibility that the amino-terminal myosin binding moiety might stick out from the shaft of the thin filament. Such whiskers are often projected out as a cluster to the same side of native thin filament. Further, we could visualize the assembly of dephosphorylated heavy meromyosin (HMM) with native or reconstituted thin filament forming "nonproductive" complex in the presence of ATP. The association of HMM to the shaft of thin filament was through subfragment-2 moiety, in accordance with biochemical studies. Some HMM particles bound closer to the thin filament shaft, possibly suggesting the presence of the second myosin-binding site on caldesmon. Occasionally two kinds of HMM association as such coexisted at a single site on this filament in tandem. Thus, we constructed a structural model of thin filament. The proposed molecular arrangement is not only compatible with all the biochemical results but also provides additional support for our recent findings (E. Katayoma, G. C. Scott-Woo, and M. Ikebe (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 3919-3925) regarding the capability of caldesmon to induce dephosphorylated myosin filament, which explains the existence of thick filaments in relaxed smooth muscle cells.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the importance of the myosin head in thick filament formation and myofibrillogenesis by generating transgenic Drosophila lines expressing either an embryonic or an adult isoform of the myosin rod in their indirect flight muscles. The headless myosin molecules retain the regulatory light-chain binding site, the alpha-helical rod and the C-terminal tailpiece. Both isoforms of headless myosin co-assemble with endogenous full-length myosin in wild-type muscle cells. However, rod polypeptides interfere with muscle function and cause a flightless phenotype. Electron microscopy demonstrates that this results from an antimorphic effect upon myofibril assembly. Thick filaments assemble when the myosin rod is expressed in mutant indirect flight muscles where no full-length myosin heavy chain is produced. These filaments show the characteristic hollow cross-section observed in wild type. The headless thick filaments can assemble with thin filaments into hexagonally packed arrays resembling normal myofibrils. However, thick filament length as well as sarcomere length and myofibril shape are abnormal. Therefore, thick filament assembly and many aspects of myofibrillogenesis are independent of the myosin head and these processes are regulated by the myosin rod and tailpiece. However, interaction of the myosin head with other myofibrillar components is necessary for defining filament length and myofibril dimensions.  相似文献   

14.
Following the original proposals about myosin filament structure put forward as part of a general myosin filament model (Squire, 1971, 1972) it is here shown what the most likely molecular packing arrangements within the backbones of certain myosin filaments would be assuming that the model is correct. That this is so is already indicated by recently published experimental results which have confirmed several predictions of the model (Bullard and Reedy, 1972; Reedy et al., 1972; Tregear and Squire, 1973).The starting point in the analysis of the myosin packing arrangements is the model for the myosin ribbons in vertebrate smooth muscle proposed by Small &; Squire (1972). It is shown that there is only one reasonable type of packing arrangement for the rod portions of the myosin molecules which will account for the known structure of the ribbons and which is consistent with the known properties of myosin molecules. The dominant interactions in this packing scheme are between parallel myosin molecules which are related by axial shifts of 430 Å and 720 Å. In this analysis the myosin rods are treated as uniform rods of electron density and only the general features of two-strand coiled-coil molecules are considered.Since the general myosin filament model is based on the assumption that the structures of different types of myosin filament must be closely related, the packing scheme derived for the myosin ribbons is used to deduce the structures of the main parts (excluding the bare zones) of the myosin filaments in a variety of muscles. It is shown in each case that there is only one packing scheme consistent with all the available data on these filaments and that in each filament type exactly the same interactions between myosin rods are involved. In other words the myosin-myosin interactions involved in filament formation are specific, they involve molecular shifts of either 430 Å or 720 Å, and are virtually identical in all the different myosin filaments which have been considered. Apart from the myosin ribbons, these are the filaments in vertebrate skeletal muscle, insect flight muscle and certain molluscan muscles.In the case of the thick filaments in vertebrate skeletal muscle the form of the myosin packing arrangement in the bare zone is considered and a packing scheme proposed which involves antiparallel overlaps between myosin rods of 1300 Å and 430 Å. It is shown that this scheme readily explains the triangular profiles of the myosin filaments in the bare zone (Pepe, 1967, 1971) and many other observations on the form of these myosin filaments.Finally it is shown that the cores of several different myosin filaments, assuming they contain protein, may consist of different arrangements of one or other of two types of core subfilament.  相似文献   

15.
Tropomyosin is a protein that controls the interactions of actin and myosin as a part of the regulation of muscle contraction. The 420 Å long α-helical coiled-coil molecules form long filaments, both in muscle and in crystals. The x-ray diffraction data from tropomyosin crystals have indicated large scale motions of the filaments that can be related to the inherent mechanical properties of the molecule, and by extension, to the role of tropomyosin in the cooperative activation of the thin filaments of muscle. Diffuse scattering analysis has provided information about the amplitudes of the motions that has been used to calculate the intrinsic flexibility of the molecule. It can then be shown that each tropomyosin molecule by itself can only mediate interactions of the nearest-neighboring tropomyosin molecules along the filament. The repeating nature of the thin filament, however, allows the entire filament to activate cooperatively. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
P Graceffa 《Biochemistry》1999,38(37):11984-11992
It has been proposed that during the activation of muscle contraction the initial binding of myosin heads to the actin thin filament contributes to switching on the thin filament and that this might involve the movement of actin-bound tropomyosin. The movement of smooth muscle tropomyosin on actin was investigated in this work by measuring the change in distance between specific residues on tropomyosin and actin by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) as a function of myosin head binding to actin. An energy transfer acceptor was attached to Cys374 of actin and a donor to the tropomyosin heterodimer at either Cys36 of the beta-chain or Cys190 of the alpha-chain. FRET changed for the donor at both positions of tropomyosin upon addition of skeletal or smooth muscle myosin heads, indicating a movement of the whole tropomyosin molecule. The changes in FRET were hyperbolic and saturated at about one head per seven actin subunits, indicating that each head cooperatively affects several tropomyosin molecules, presumably via tropomyosin's end-to-end interaction. ATP, which dissociates myosin from actin, completely reversed the changes in FRET induced by heads, whereas in the presence of ADP the effect of heads was the same as in its absence. The results indicate that myosin with and without ADP, intermediates in the myosin ATPase hydrolytic pathway, are effective regulators of tropomyosin position, which might play a role in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction.  相似文献   

17.
Tropomyosin (Tm) plays a critical role in regulating the contraction of striated muscle. The three-state model of activation posits that Tm exists in three positions on the thin filament: "blocked" in the absence of calcium when myosin cannot bind, "closed" when calcium binds troponin and Tm partially covers the myosin binding site, and "open" after myosin binding forces Tm completely off neighboring sites. However, we recently showed that actin filaments decorated with phosphorylated Tm are driven by myosin with greater force than bare actin filaments. This result cannot be explained by simple steric hindrance and suggests that Tm may have additional effects on actin-myosin interactions. We therefore tested the hypothesis that Tm and its phosphorylation state affect the rate at which single actin-myosin bonds form and rupture. Using a laser trap, we measured the time necessary for the first bond to form between actin and rigor heavy meromyosin and the load-dependent durations of those bonds. Measurements were repeated in the presence of subsaturating myosin-S1 to force Tm from the closed to the open state. Maximum bond lifetimes increased in the open state, but only when Tm was phosphorylated. While the frequency with which bonds formed was extremely low in the closed state, when a bond did form it took significantly less time to do so than with bare actin. These data suggest there are at least two closed states of the thin filament, and that Tm provides additional points of contact for myosin.  相似文献   

18.
A new model of cooperative myosin-thin filament binding   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Cooperative myosin binding to the thin filament is critical to regulation of cardiac and skeletal muscle contraction. This report delineates and fits to experimental data a new model of this process, in which specific tropomyosin-actin interactions are important, the tropomyosin-tropomyosin polymer is continuous rather than disjointed, and tropomyosin affects myosin-actin binding by shifting among three positions as in recent structural studies. A myosin- and tropomyosin-induced conformational change in actin is proposed, rationalizing the approximately 10,000-fold strengthening effect of myosin on tropomyosin-actin binding. Also, myosin S1 binding to regulated filaments containing mutant tropomyosins with internal deletions exhibited exaggerated cooperativity, implying an allosteric effect of tropomyosin on actin and allowing the effect's measurement. Comparisons among the mutants suggest the change in actin is promoted much more strongly by the middle of tropomyosin than by its ends. Regardless of calcium binding to troponin, this change in actin facilitates the shift in tropomyosin position to the actin inner domain, which is required for tight myosin-actin association. It also increases myosin-actin affinity 7-fold compared with the absence of troponin-tropomyosin. Finally, initiation of a shift in tropomyosin position is 100-fold more difficult than is its extension from one actin to the next, producing the myosin binding cooperativity that underlies cooperative activation of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

19.
Ca(2+) signaling in striated muscle cells is critically dependent upon thin filament proteins tropomyosin (Tm) and troponin (Tn) to regulate mechanical output. Using in vitro measurements of contractility, we demonstrate that even in the absence of actin and Tm, human cardiac Tn (cTn) enhances heavy meromyosin MgATPase activity by up to 2.5-fold in solution. In addition, cTn without Tm significantly increases, or superactivates sliding speed of filamentous actin (F-actin) in skeletal motility assays by at least 12%, depending upon [cTn]. cTn alone enhances skeletal heavy meromyosin's MgATPase in a concentration-dependent manner and with sub-micromolar affinity. cTn-mediated increases in myosin ATPase may be the cause of superactivation of maximum Ca(2+)-activated regulated thin filament sliding speed in motility assays relative to unregulated skeletal F-actin. To specifically relate this classical superactivation to cardiac muscle, we demonstrate the same response using motility assays where only cardiac proteins were used, where regulated cardiac thin filament sliding speeds with cardiac myosin are >50% faster than unregulated cardiac F-actin. We additionally demonstrate that the COOH-terminal mobile domain of cTnI is not required for this interaction or functional enhancement of myosin activity. Our results provide strong evidence that the interaction between cTn and myosin is responsible for enhancement of cross-bridge kinetics when myosin binds in the vicinity of Tn on thin filaments. These data imply a novel and functionally significant molecular interaction that may provide new insights into Ca(2+) activation in cardiac muscle cells.  相似文献   

20.
The contractile systems of vertebrate smooth and striated muscles are compared. Smooth muscles contain relatively large amounts of actin and tropomyosin organized into thin filaments, and smaller amounts of myosin in the form of thick filaments. The protein contents are consistent with observed thin:thick filament ratios of about 15-18:1 in smooth compared to 2:1 in striated muscle. The basic characteristics of both types of contractile proteins are similar; but there are a variety of quantitative differences in protein structures, enzymatic activities and filament stabilities. Biochemical and X-ray diffraction data generally support recent ultrastructural evidence concerning the organization of the myofilaments in smooth muscle, although a basic contractile unit comparable to the sarcomere in striated muscle has not been discerned. Myofilament interactions and contraction in smooth muscle are controlled by changes in the Ca2+ concentration. Recent evidence suggests the Ca2+-binding regulatory site is associated with the myosin in vertebrate smooth muscle (as in a variety of invertebrate muscles), rather than with troponin which is the regulatory protein associated with the thin filament in vertebrate striated muscle.  相似文献   

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