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1.
Actin purified from maize pollen grains like actin from other sources could considerably inhibit the activity of DNase Ⅰ . A linear relationship existed between inhibition and the concentration of actin. However, DNase Ⅰ was less inhibited by pollen actin than by rabbit muscle actin under the same conditions. The values of Kapp of inhibition were 1.25 μg/mL for pollen actin and 0.75 μg/mL for rabbit muscle actin. DNase Ⅰdepolymerized both pollen and rabbit muscle actin filaments. But the rate of depolymerization of pollen F-actin was higher than that of rabbit muscle F-actin under the same conditions.  相似文献   

2.
A factor termed Physarum actinin was isolated and partially purified from plasmodia of a myxomycete, Physarum polycephalum. When Physarum actinin was mixed with purified Physarum or rabbit striated muscle G-actin in a weight ratio of about 1 actinin to 9 actin and then the polymerization of G-actin induced, G-actin polymerized to the ordinary F-actin on addition of 0.1 M KCl. However, it polymerized to Mg-polymer on addition of 2 mM MgCl2. The reduced viscosity (etasp/C) of the Mg-polymer was 1.2 dl/g, about one-seventh of that of the F-actin (7.4 dl/g). The sedimentation coefficient of the Mg-polymer was 22.8 S, almost the same as that of the F-actin (29.4 S). The Mg-polymer showed the specific ATPase activity of the order of 1 . 10(-3) mumol ATP/mg actin per min. It was shown that Physarum actinin copolymerized with G-actin to form Mg-polymer on addition of 2 mM MgCl2. The molecular weights of Physarum actinin were about 90 000 in salt-free or slat solutions and 43 000 in a dodecyl sulfate solution. The range of salting out with ammonium sulfate was 50--65% saturation, which was different from that of Physarum actin (15--35% saturation). Physarum actinin did not interact with Physarum myosin or muscle heavy meromyosin. When the weight ratio of actinin to actin increased, the flow birefringence of the formed Mg-polymer decreased, and it became almost zero at the weight ratio of 1 actinin to 5 actin. ATPase activity reached the maximum level (2.2 . 10(-3) mumol ATP/mg actin per min) at the same ratio. On the addition of Physarum actinin to purified Physarum F-actin which had been polymerized on addition of 2 mM MgCl2 the viscosity decreased rapidly, suggesting that the F-actin filaments were broken in the smaller fragments or that they transformed to Mg-polymers. A factor with properties similar to Physarum actinin was isolated from acetone powder of sea urchin eggs.  相似文献   

3.
X. Liu  L. -F. Yen 《Protoplasma》1995,186(1-2):87-92
Summary Actin purified from maize pollen grains can be polymerized into F-actin which increased the ATPase activities of proteolytic fragments (HMM, S1) of rabbit muscle myosin. The values of Kapp is 232 M for HMM and 290 M for S1, which are six- and seven-fold higher than those of rabbit muscle F-actin under the same conditions. Pollen actin and rabbit muscle myosin form hybrid actomyosin showing increase in viscosity and turbidity of solution. Viscosity and turbidity of the actomyosin dropped and then increased again with addition of ATP. Polymerized pollen actin can be decorated in vitro with both rabbit muscle HMM and S1 to form an arrowhead-shaped structure like that observed in living plant cells. The results show that pollen actin is similar to muscle actin at a qualitative level. But there are differences between them at a quantitative level.Abbreviations HMM heavy meromyosin - S1 myosin subfragment 1 - ATP adenosine-5-triphosphate  相似文献   

4.
A novel protein factor which reduced the low-shear viscosity of rabbit skeletal muscle actin was purified from a 0.6 M KCl-extract of an insoluble fraction of sea urchin eggs by ammonium sulfate fractionation, gel filtration column chromatography, DNase I column chromatography, and hydroxylapatite column chromatography. This protein factor was shown to be a one-to-one complex of a 20,000-molecular-weight protein and egg actin. This protein complex accelerated the initial rate of actin polymerization, but reduced the steady-state viscosity of F-actin. It inhibited at substoichiometric amounts the elongation of actin filaments on sonicated F-actin fragments and depolymerization of F-actin induced by dilution. In addition, it increased the critical concentration of actin for polymerization. All these effects of this protein complex on actin could be explained by the "capping the barbed end" of the actin filament by the complex. The 20,000-molecular-weight protein which was separated from actin also possessed the barbed end-capping activities, but differed from the complex in that it did not accelerate the polymerization of actin.  相似文献   

5.
Gibbon BC  Kovar DR  Staiger CJ 《The Plant cell》1999,11(12):2349-2363
The actin cytoskeleton is absolutely required for pollen germination and tube growth, but little is known about the regulation of actin polymer concentrations or dynamics in pollen. Here, we report that latrunculin B (LATB), a potent inhibitor of actin polymerization, had effects on pollen that were distinct from those of cytochalasin D. The equilibrium dissociation constant measured for LATB binding to maize pollen actin was determined to be 74 nM. This high affinity for pollen actin suggested that treatment of pollen with LATB would have marked effects on actin function. Indeed, LATB inhibited maize pollen germination half-maximally at 50 nM, yet it blocked pollen tube growth at one-tenth of that concentration. Low concentrations of LATB also caused partial disruption of the actin cytoskeleton in germinated maize pollen, as visualized by light microscopy and fluorescent-phalloidin staining. The amounts of filamentous actin (F-actin) in pollen were quantified by measuring phalloidin binding sites, a sensitive assay that had not been used previously for plant cells. The amount of F-actin in maize pollen increased slightly upon germination, whereas the total actin protein level did not change. LATB treatment caused a dose-dependent depolymerization of F-actin in populations of maize pollen grains and tubes. Moreover, the same concentrations of LATB caused similar depolymerization in pollen grains before germination and in pollen tubes. These data indicate that the increased sensitivity of pollen tube growth to LATB was not due to general destabilization of the actin cytoskeleton or to decreases in F-actin amounts after germination. We postulate that germination is less sensitive to LATB than tube extension because the presence of a small population of LATB-sensitive actin filaments is critical for maintenance of tip growth but not for germination of pollen, or because germination is less sensitive to partial depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

6.
The mechanism of the interaction between two genetically determined serum vitamin D-binding protein forms and the muscle skeletal actin was investigated. Vitamin D-binding protein was isolated in a good yield from human serum, using immunoaffinity chromatography. 16 mg of pure vitamin D-binding protein were obtained from 100 ml of serum. The interaction between purified vitamin D-binding protein and skeletal muscle actin was studied by viscosity, delta A (232 nm) measurements and by electron microscopy. The effect of vitamin D-binding protein on actin polymerization is characterized by the decrease of the nucleation and elongation rates and by the decrease of the final concentration of polymerized actin in the steady state. The depolymerizing effect is not the result of direct action on vitamin D-binding protein on F-actin but rather of an increased concentration of the complex of the former protein with G-actin. The characteristics of the vitamin D-binding protein and profilin interactions with actin are similar. Both proteins seem to react only with G-actin.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined fragments of the filamentous network underlying the human erythrocyte membrane by high-resolution electron microscopy. Networks were released from ghosts by extraction with Triton X-100, freed of extraneous proteins in 1.5 M NaCl, and collected by centrifugation onto a sucrose cushion. These preparations contained primarily protein bands 1 + 2 (spectrin), band 4.1 and band 5 (actin). The networks were partially disassembled by incubation at 37 degrees C in 2 mM NaPi (pH 7), which caused the preferential dissociation of spectrin tetramers to dimers. The fragments so generated were fractionated by gel filtration chromatography and visualized by negative staining with uranyl acetate on fenestrated carbon films. Unit complexes, which sedimented at approximately 40S, contained linear filaments approximately 7-8 nm diam from which several slender and convoluted filaments projected. The linear filaments had a mean length of 52 +/- 17 nm and a serrated profile reminiscent of F-actin. They could be decorated in an arrowhead pattern with S1 fragments of muscle heavy meromyosin which, incidentally, displaced the convoluted filaments. Furthermore, the linear filaments nucleated the polymerization of rabbit muscle G-actin, predominantly but not exclusively from the fast-growing ends. On this basis, we have identified the linear filaments as F-actin; we infer that the convoluted filaments are spectrin. Spectrin molecules were usually attached to actin filaments in clusters that showed a preference for the ends of the F-actin. We also observed free globules up to 15 nm diam, usually associated with three spectrin molecules, which also nucleated actin polymerization; these may be simple junctional complexes of spectrin, actin, and band 4.1. In larger ensembles, spectrin tetramers linked actin filaments and/or globules into irregular arrays. Intact networks were an elaboration of the basic pattern manifested by the fragments. Thus, we have provided ultrastructural evidence that the submembrane skeleton is organized, as widely inferred from less direct information, into short actin filaments linked by multiple tetramers of spectrin clustered at sites of association with band 4.1.  相似文献   

8.
Isolation and characterization of covalently cross-linked actin dimer   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Covalently cross-linked actin dimer was isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin reacted with phenylenebismaleimide (Knight, P., and Offer, G. (1978) Biochem. J. 175, 1023-1032). The UV spectrum of the purified cross-linked actin dimer, in a nonpolymerizing buffer, was very similar to that of native F-actin and not to the spectrum of G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer polymerized to filaments that were indistinguishable in the electron microscope from F-actin made from native G-actin and that were similar to native F-actin in their ability to activate the Mg2+-ATPase of myosin subfragment-1. The critical concentrations of polymerization of cross-linked actin dimer in 0.5 mM and 2.0 mM MgCl2, 2 to 4 microM, and 1 to 2 microM, respectively, were similar to the values for native G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer contained 2 mol of bound nucleotide/mol of dimer. One bound nucleotide exchanged with ATP in solution with a t 1/2 of 55 min and with ADP with a t 1/2 of 5 h. The second bound nucleotide exchanged much more slowly. The more rapidly exchangeable site contained 10 to 15% bound ADP.Pi and 85 to 90% bound ATP while the second site contained much less, if any, bound ADP.Pi. Cross-linked actin dimer had an ATPase activity in 0.5 mM MgCl2 that was 7 times greater than the ATPase activity of native G-actin and that was also stimulated by cytochalasin D. These data are discussed in relation to the possible role of ATP in actin polymerization and function with the speculation that the cross-linked actin dimer may serve simultaneously as a useful model for each of the two different ends of native F-actin.  相似文献   

9.
Inhibition of an early stage of actin polymerization by actobindin   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Actobindin, a 25,000-dalton dimeric protein purified from Acanthamoeba castellanii was previously shown to form a 1:1 molar complex with both Acanthamoeba and rabbit muscle G-actin with KD values of about 5 and 7 microM, respectively, and not to interact with F-actin (Lambooy, P. K., and Korn, E. D. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 17150-17155). We now find that actobindin is a much more potent inhibitor of the early phases of polymerization of both Acanthamoeba and muscle G-actin than can be accounted for by its binding to G-actin. Actobindin inhibits the polymerization of both G-ATP-actin and G-ADP-actin, and has little, if any, effect on the rate of ATP hydrolysis that accompanies polymerization of G-ATP-actin. The kinetics of actin polymerization in the presence of actobindin are qualitatively consistent with the postulation that actobindin binds reversibly to and inhibits the elongation of an intermediate between G-actin and F-actin, perhaps a small oligomer(s) or a species in equilibrium with such an intermediate. This hypothesis implies the, at least transient, existence of an actin species with properties different from those of monomers and filaments. Actobindin may, then, provide a useful experimental tool for investigating the still relatively obscure early steps in actin polymerization. Irrespective of its mechanism of action, actobindin might serve in situ to reduce the rate of actin polymerization de novo while having relatively little effect on the rates of elongation of existing filaments or from actobindin-resistant nucleating sites.  相似文献   

10.
Purification and characterization of actin from maize pollen   总被引:9,自引:1,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Liu X  Yen LF 《Plant physiology》1992,99(3):1151-1155
Pollen is an excellent source of actin for biochemical and physiological studies of the actomyosin system in higher plants. We have developed an efficient method to prepare relatively high levels of actin from the pollen of maize (Zea mays L.). The procedures of purification include acetone powder preparation, saturated ammonium sulfate fractionation, diethylaminoethyl-cellulose chromatography, a cycle of polymerization-depolymerization, and Sephacryl S-200 gel filtration. The average yield of actin is 19 milligrams per 100 grams of pollen grains extracted. This is comparable with those of Acanthamoeba castellanii and human platelets. The purified pollen actin is electrophoretically homogeneous and its molecular mass is 42 kilodaltons. The amino acid composition and circular dichroism spectrum of pollen actin are identical to those of muscle actin. The actin purified from pollen is able to polymerize to F-actin. The pollen F-actin activated the activity of the muscle myosin ATPase sevenfold.  相似文献   

11.
To assess more systematically functional differences among non-muscle and muscle actins and the effect of specific mutations on their function, we compared actin from Dictyostelium discoideum (D-actin) with actin from rabbit skeletal muscle (R-actin) with respect to the formation of filaments, their three-dimensional structure and mechanical properties. With Mg(2+) occupying the single high-affinity divalent cation-binding site, the course of polymerization is very similar for the two types of actin. In contrast, when Ca(2+ )is bound, D-actin exhibits a significantly longer lag phase at the onset of polymerization than R-actin. Crossover spacing and helical screw angle of negatively stained filaments are similar for D and R-F-actin filaments, irrespective of the tightly bound divalent cation. However, three-dimensional helical reconstructions reveal that the intersubunit contacts along the two long-pitch helical strands of D-(Ca)F-actin filaments are more tenuous compared to those in R-(Ca)F-actin filaments. D-(Mg)F-actin filaments on the other hand exhibit more massive contacts between the two long-pitch helical strands than R-(Mg)F-actin filaments. Moreover, in contrast to the structure of R-F-actin filaments which is not significantly modulated by the divalent cation, the intersubunit contacts both along and between the two long-pitch helical strands are weaker in D-(Ca)F-actin compared to D-(Mg)F-actin filaments. Consistent with these structural differences, D-(Ca)F-actin filaments were significantly more flexible than D-(Mg)F-actin.Taken together, this work documents that despite being highly conserved, muscle and non-muscle actins exhibit subtle differences in terms of their polymerization behavior, and the three-dimensional structure and mechanical properties of their F-actin filaments which, in turn, may account for their functional diversity.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of spectrin on the polymerization of muscle actin has been investigated by hydrodynamic methods and electron microscopy. Spectrin markedly accelerated polymerization of actin. The effect was more easily observed in lower concentrations of KCl (e.g. 24 mM) where spontaneous polymerization was negligibly small. Similarly large acceleration was observed for polymerization in MgCl2 or CaCl2. The rate of polymerization of actin was proportionally increased with the concentration of spectrin added to a fixed concentration of action. The stationary level of specific viscosity also increased with the spectrin concentration, but at larger concentrations it became smaller. The flow birefringence and electron microscope measurements indicated that actin polymers formed under the influence of spectrin were shorter than those of control F-actin filaments. The structural viscosity and electron microscope observations suggested that the interaction between F-actin fibers was not increased by spectrin. These data strongly suggest a seeding role of spectrin in the polymerization of actin. Spectrin accelerates formation of the nuclei for polymerization. The more the nuclei are formed, the larger the number of the grown polymers are and this leads to rapid formation of shorter polymers since the amount of actin is limited. The acceleration activity was found only in freshly prepared spectrin from fresh ghosts taken from freshly drawn blood.  相似文献   

13.
High-speed centrifugation supernatants from slime mould plasmodia show considerable activities to inhibit the polymerization of actin as revealed by viscosity measurements. By following increasing inhibitory activities an actin modulating protein (AM-protein) has been isolated and purified which affects the polymer state of actin. AM-protein has a peptide chain weight of 42 000 and is thus indistinguishable from actin by SDS-electrophoresis, but can be clearly distinguished by isoelectric focussing. Peptide maps from partial proteolytic digests of AM-protein and Physarum actin reveal no similarities thereby excluding that AM-protein is a denatured or modified form of actin. The protein is isolated from crude extracts as a heterodimer with actin to which it strongly binds. This heterodimer affects the polymerization of large amounts of actin by inducing oligomeric or low-polymer actin complexes and thus inhibiting the formation of long actin filaments. The AM-protein/actin heterodimer has only a slight effect of F-actin. It partially depolymerized F-actin within several hours. By ion exchange chromatography in 8 M urea the AM-protein is separated from the actin. The purified AM-protein monomer is renatured and inhibits the polymerization of actin like the heterodimer but additionally, depolymerizes actin filaments very rapidly and effectively by breaking them into oligomer or low-polymer complexes. The addition of less than 1% AM-protein causes a decrease of the specific viscosity of an F-actin solution by 50%. The degree of polymerization inhibition and depolymerization of actin is strictly dependent on the amount of AM-protein added; therefore a catalytic type of reaction between both proteins can be excluded.  相似文献   

14.
beta-Actinin, a minor regulatory protein of muscle, was purified from skeletal muscles of rabbit and chicken by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography. beta-Actinin consisted of two subunits, beta I and betaII, with chain weights of 37,000 and 34,000 daltons, respectively. The amino acid compositions were similar, though not identical. It appears that each of the two subunits is associated in solution. beta-Actinin had the following effects on actin: (1) inhibition of reassociation of F-actin fragments; (2) inhibition of network formation of F-actin; (3) inhibition of growth of F-actin fragments; (4) retardation of depolymerization of F-actin and (5) acceleration of polymerization of G-actin. All these actions of beta-actinin can be explained in terms of action as an "ending factor". Experimental evidence favored the view that beta-actinin is bound to one end of the F-actin filament, namely to the end opposite to the direction of polymerization. Fluorescence-labeled anti-beta-actinin stained the middle portion of the A band of myofibrils. Based on the finding that the stain was unchanged on removal of myosin, it is suggested that beta-actinin is located at the free ends of the I filaments of myofibrils. Thus is seems likely that beta-actinin functions as an ending factor for actin filaments.  相似文献   

15.
Jing Y  Yi K  Ren H 《Protoplasma》2003,222(3-4):183-191
Summary. Pollen and skeletal muscle actins were purified and labeled with fluorescent dyes that have different emission wavelengths. Observation by electron microscopy shows that the fluorescent actins are capable to polymerize into filamentous actin in vitro, bind to myosin S-1 fragments, and have a critical concentration similar to unlabeled actin, indicating that they are functionally active. The globular actins from two sources were mixed and polymerized by the addition of ATP and salts. The copolymerization experiment shows that when excited by light of the appropriate wavelength, both red actin filaments (pollen actin) and green actin filaments (muscle actin) can be visualized under the microscope, but no filaments exhibiting both green and red colors are detected. Furthermore, coprecipitations of labeled pollen actin with unlabeled pollen and skeletal muscle actin were performed. Measurements of fluorescent intensity show that the amount of labeled pollen actin precipitating with pollen actin was much higher than that with skeletal muscle actin, indicating that pollen and muscle actin tend not to form heteropolymers. Injection of labeled pollen actin into living stamen hair cells results in the formation of normal actin filaments in transvacuolar strands and the cortical cytoplasm. In contrast, labeled skeletal muscle actin has detrimental effects on the cellular architecture. The results from coinjection of the actin-disrupting reagent cytochalasin D with pollen actin show that overexpression of pollen actin prolongs the displacement of the nucleus and facilitates the recovery of the nuclear position, actin filament architecture, and transvacuolar strands. However, muscle actin perturbs actin filaments when injected into stamen hair cells. Moreover, nuclear displacement occurs more rapidly when cytochalasin D and muscle actin are coinjected into the cell. It is concluded that actins from plant and animal sources behave differently in vitro and in vivo and that they are functionally not interchangeable.  相似文献   

16.
Cross-linking of actin filaments (F-actin) into bundles and networks was investigated with three different isoforms of the dumbbell-shaped alpha-actinin homodimer under identical reaction conditions. These were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle, Acanthamoeba, and Dictyostelium, respectively. Examination in the electron microscope revealed that each isoform was able to cross-link F-actin into networks. In addition, F-actin bundles were obtained with chicken gizzard and Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, but not Dictyostelium alpha-actinin under conditions where actin by itself polymerized into disperse filaments. This F-actin bundle formation critically depended on the proper molar ratio of alpha-actinin to actin, and hence F-actin bundles immediately disappeared when free alpha-actinin was withdrawn from the surrounding medium. The apparent dissociation constants (Kds) at half-saturation of the actin binding sites were 0.4 microM at 22 degrees C and 1.2 microM at 37 degrees C for chicken gizzard, and 2.7 microM at 22 degrees C for both Acanthamoeba and Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. Chicken gizzard and Dictyostelium alpha-actinin predominantly cross-linked actin filaments in an antiparallel fashion, whereas Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin cross-linked actin filaments preferentially in a parallel fashion. The average molecular length of free alpha-actinin was 37 nm for glycerol-sprayed/rotary metal-shadowed and 35 nm for negatively stained chicken gizzard; 46 and 44 nm, respectively, for Acanthamoeba; and 34 and 31 nm, respectively, for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. In negatively stained preparations we also evaluated the average molecular length of alpha-actinin when bound to actin filaments: 36 nm for chicken gizzard and 35 nm for Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, a molecular length roughly coinciding with the crossover repeat of the two-stranded F-actin helix (i.e., 36 nm), but only 28 nm for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. Furthermore, the minimal spacing between cross-linking alpha-actinin molecules along actin filaments was close to 36 nm for both smooth muscle and Acanthamoeba alpha-actinin, but only 31 nm for Dictyostelium alpha-actinin. This observation suggests that the molecular length of the alpha-actinin homodimer may determine its spacing along the actin filament, and hence F-actin bundle formation may require "tight" (i.e., one molecule after the other) and "untwisted" (i.e., the long axis of the molecule being parallel to the actin filament axis) packing of alpha-actinin molecules along the actin filaments.  相似文献   

17.
The polymerization of pyrene-labelled skeletal muscle actin has been monitored in the presence of chromatographically purified spectrin dimers and tetramers. A small but consistent effect of spectrin binding on the critical concentration was observed for actin polymerized in the presence of 1 mM MgCl2. These data were analysed using the principle of linked functions. Spectrin binds exclusively to the filamentous form of actin, and thereby stabilizes F-actin with respect to the G-form. The decrease in the critical concentration for actin polymerization, in the presence of spectrin, has been shown to be consistent with an equilibrium constant for the binding of spectrin to individual promoters within F-actin of approximately 8 X 10(5) M-1 at 23 degrees C, and an ionic strength of 7 mM.  相似文献   

18.
In embryonic skeletal muscle, a large amount of non-polymerized actin exists in the cytoplasm (Shimizu and Obinata [1986] J. Biochem. 99, 751-759). A 19-kDa protein (called 19K protein) which binds to G-actin was purified by sequential chromatography on DNase I-agarose, hydroxylapatite, SP-Sephadex, and Sephadex G-75, from the sarcoplasmic fraction of embryonic chicken skeletal muscle. This protein decreased the extent of actin polymerization at a steady state and increased the monomeric actin in a concentration-dependent fashion; it also caused quick depolymerization of F-actin, as determined by spectrophotometry at 237 nm, viscometry, DNase I inhibition assay, and electron microscopy. The molar ratio of 19K protein and actin interacting with each other was estimated to be 1:1. From these results, 19K protein was regarded as being actin depolymerizing protein. The amount of 19K protein in muscle decreased during development. The inhibitory action of 19K protein was removed by myosin or heavy meromyosin, and actin filaments were formed on the surface of myosin filaments when myosin filaments were added to a mixture of actin and 19K protein in a physiological salt solution. We propose that actin assembly is dually controlled in the developing muscle by the inhibitor(s) and an accelerator (myosin); this mechanism may enable the ordered assembly of actin and myosin in the early phase of myofibrillogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
Actin Purified from Maize Pollen Functions in Living Plant Cells   总被引:12,自引:1,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
A vast array of actin binding proteins (ABPs), together with intracellular signaling molecules, modulates the spatiotemporal distribution of actin filaments in eukaryotic cells. To investigate the complex regulation of actin organization in plant cells, we designed experiments to reconstitute actin-ABP interactions in vitro with purified components. Because vertebrate skeletal [alpha]-actin has distinct and unpredictable binding affinity for nonvertebrate ABPs, it is essential that these in vitro studies be performed with purified plant actin. Here, we report the development of a new method for isolating functional actin from maize pollen. The addition of large amounts of recombinant profilin to pollen extracts facilitated the depolymerization of actin filaments and the formation of a profilin-actin complex. The profilin-actin complex was then isolated by affinity chromatography on poly-L-proline-Sepharose, and actin was selectively eluted with a salt wash. Pollen actin was further purified by one cycle of polymerization and depolymerization. The recovery of functional actin by this rapid and convenient procedure was substantial; the average yield was 6 mg of actin from 10 g of pollen. We undertook an initial physicochemical characterization of this native pollen actin. Under physiological conditions, pollen actin polymerized with kinetics similar in quality to those for vertebrate [alpha]-actin and had a critical concentration for assembly of 0.6 [mu]M. Moreover, pollen actin interacted specifically and in a characteristic fashion with several ABPs. Tradescantia cells were microinjected and used as an experimental system to study the behavior of pollen actin in vivo. We demonstrated that purified pollen actin ameliorated the effects of injecting excess profilin into live stamen hair cells.  相似文献   

20.
A new, simple method for the isolation of actin from myxomycete plasmodia has been developed. Plasmodium myosin B was incubated at 55 degrees C for 15 min in the presence of ATP or was treated with 90% acetone. By this treatment myosin was denatured completely. Actin was then extracted with a dilute ATP and cysteine solution from the heat- or acetone-treated myosin B. The method is simple and almost pure actin was obtained in high yield. The purified G-actin polymerized to F-actin on addition of 0.1 M KCl or 2 mM MgCl2. The viscosity of the purified F-actin was 8-10 dl/g. The F-actin activated muscle myosin ATPase, and actomyosin synthesized from the F-actin and muscle myosin showed superprecipitation on addition of ATP.  相似文献   

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