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1.
The two major proteins in the I-bands of skeletal muscle, actin and tropomyosin, were each labeled with fluorescent dyes and microinjected into cultured cardiac myocytes and skeletal muscle myotubes. Actin was incorporated along the entire length of the I-band in both types of muscle cells. In the myotubes, the incorporation was uniform, whereas in cardiac myocytes twice as much actin was incorporated in the Z-bands as in any other area of the I-band. Labeled tropomyosin that had been prepared from skeletal or smooth muscle was incorporated in a doublet in the I-band with an absence of incorporation in the Z-band. Tropomyosin prepared from brain was incorporated in a similar pattern in the I-bands of cardiac myocytes but was not incorporated in myotubes. These results in living muscle cells contrast with the patterns obtained when labeled actin and tropomyosin are added to isolated myofibrils. Labeled tropomyosins do not bind to any region of the isolated myofibrils, and labeled actin binds to A-bands. Thus, only living skeletal and cardiac muscle cells incorporate exogenous actin and tropomyosin in patterns expected from their known myofibrillar localization. These experiments demonstrate that in contrast to the isolated myofibrils, myofibrils in living cells are dynamic structures that are able to exchange actin and tropomyosin molecules for corresponding labeled molecules. The known overlap of actin filaments in cardiac Z-bands but not in skeletal muscle Z-bands accounts for the different patterns of actin incorporation in these cells. The ability of cardiac myocytes and non-muscle cells but not skeletal myotubes to incorporate brain tropomyosin may reflect differences in the relative actin-binding affinities of non-muscle tropomyosin and the respective native tropomyosins. The implications of these results for myofibrillogenesis are presented.  相似文献   

2.
To determine if a living cell is necessary for the incorporation of actin, alpha-actinin, and tropomyosin into the cytoskeleton, we have exposed cell models to fluorescently labeled contractile proteins. In this in vitro system, lissamine rhodamine-labeled actin bound to attachment plaques, ruffles, cleavage furrows and stress fibers, and the binding could not be blocked by prior exposure to unlabeled actin. Fluorescently labeled alpha-actinin also bound to ruffles, attachment plaques, cleavage furrows, and stress fibers. The periodicity of fluorescent alpha-actinin along stress fibers was wider in gerbil fibroma cells than it was in PtK2 cells. The fluorescent alpha-actinin binding in cell models could not be blocked by the prior addition of unlabeled alpha-actinin suggesting that alpha-actinin was binding to itself. While there was only slight binding of fluorescent tropomyosin to the cytoskeleton of interphase cells, there was stronger binding in furrow regions of models of dividing cells. The binding of fluorescently labeled tropomyosin could be blocked by prior exposure of the cell models to unlabeled tropomyosin. If unlabeled actin was permitted to polymerize in the stress fibers in cell models, fluorescently labeled tropomyosin stained the fibers. In contrast to the labeled contractile proteins, fluorescently labeled ovalbumin and BSA did not stain any elements of the cytoskeleton. Our results are discussed in terms of the structure and assembly of stress fibers and cleavage furrows.  相似文献   

3.
Panasenko OO  Gusev NB 《IUBMB life》2000,49(4):277-282
Interaction of calponin and alpha-actinin with actin was analyzed by means of cosedimentation and electron microscopy. G-actin was polymerized in the presence of calponin, alpha-actinin, or both of these actin-binding proteins (ABPs). The single and bundled actin filaments were separated, and the stoichiometry of ABPs and actin in both types of filaments was determined. Binding of calponin to the single or bundled actin filaments was not dependent on the presence of alpha-actinin and did not displace alpha-actinin from actin. In the presence of calponin, however, less alpha-actinin was bound to the bundled actin filaments, and the binding of alpha-actinin was accompanied by a partial decrease in the calponin/actin stoichiometry in the bundles of actin filaments. Calponin had no influence on the binding of alpha-actinin to the single actin filaments. The structure of actin bundles formed in the presence of the two ABPs differed from that formed in the presence of either one singly. We conclude that calponin and alpha-actinin can coexist on actin and that nearly each actin monomer can bind one of these ABPs.  相似文献   

4.
We address the controversy of whether mature myofibrils can form in the presence of taxol, a microtubule-stabilizing compound. Previous electron microscopic studies reported the absence of actin filaments and Z-bands in taxol-treated myocytes [Antin et al., 1981: J Cell Biol 90:300-308; Toyoma et al., 1982: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 79:6556-6560]. Quail skeletal myoblasts were isolated from 10-day-old embryos and grown in the presence or absence of taxol. Taxol inhibited the formation of multinucleated elongated myotubes. Myocytes cultured in the continual presence of taxol progressed from rounded to stellate shapes. Groups of myocytes that were clustered together after the isolation procedure fused in the presence of taxol but did not form elongated myotubes. Actin filaments and actin-binding proteins were detected with several different fluorescent probes in all myofibrils that formed in the presence of taxol. The Z-bands contained both alpha-actinin and titin, and the typical arrays of A-Bands were always associated with actin filaments in the myofibrils. Myofibril formation was followed by fixing cells each day in culture and staining with probes for actin, muscle-specific alpha-actinin, myosin II, nebulin, troponin, tropomyosin, and non-muscle myosin II. Small linear aggregates of alpha-actinin or Z-bodies, premyofibrils, were detected at the edges of the myocytes and in the arms of the taxol-treated cells and were always associated with actin filaments. Non-muscle myosin II was detected at the edges of the taxol-treated cells. Removal of the taxol drug led to the cells assuming a normal compact elongated shape. During the recovery process, additional myofibrils formed at the spreading edges of these elongated and thicker myotubes. Staining of these taxol-recovering cells with specific fluorescent reagents reveals three different classes of actin fibers. These results are consistent with a model of myofibrillogenesis that involves the transition of premyofibrils to mature myofibrils.  相似文献   

5.
When fluorescently labeled contractile proteins are injected into embryonic muscle cells, they become incorporated into the cells' myofibrils. In order to determine if this exchange of proteins is unique to the embryonic stage of development, we isolated adult cardiac myocytes and microinjected them with fluorescently labeled actin, myosin light chains, alpha-actinin, and vinculin. Each of these proteins was incorporated into the adult cardiomyocytes and was colocalized with the cells' native proteins, despite the fact that the labeled proteins were prepared from noncardiac tissues. Within 10 min of injection, alpha-actinin was incorporated into Z-bands surrounding the site of injection. Similarly, 30 sec after injection, actin was incorporated into the entire I-bands at the site of injection. Following a 3-h incubation, increased actin fluorescence was noted at the intercalated disc. Vinculin exchange was seen in the intercalated discs, as well as in the Z-bands throughout the cells. Myosin light chains required 4-6 h after injection to become incorporated into the A-bands of the adult muscle. Nonspecific proteins, such as fluorescent BSA, showed no association with the myofibrils or the former intercalated discs. When adult cells were maintained in culture for 10 days, they retain the ability to incorporate these contractile proteins into their myofibrils. T-tubules and the sarcoplasmic reticulum could be detected in periodic arrays in the freshly isolated cells using the membrane dye WW781 and DiOC6[3], respectively. In conclusion, the myofibrils in adult, as in embryonic, muscle cells are dynamic structures, permitting isoform transitions without dismantling of the myofibrils.  相似文献   

6.
K Y Horiuchi  S Chacko 《Biochemistry》1988,27(22):8388-8393
Cysteine residues of caldesmon were labeled with the fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide. The number of sulfhydryl (SH) groups in caldesmon was around 3.5 on the basis of reactivity to 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate); 80% of the SH groups were labeled with pyrene. The fluorescence spectrum from pyrene-caldesmon showed the presence of excited monomer and dimer (excimer). As the ionic strength increased, excimer fluorescence decreased, disappearing at salt concentrations higher than around 50 mM. The labeling of caldesmon with pyrene did not affect its ability to inhibit actin activation of heavy meromyosin Mg-ATPase and the release of this inhibition in the presence of Ca2+-calmodulin. Tropomyosin induced a change in the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon, indicating a conformational change associated with the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin. The affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was dependent on ionic strength. The binding constant was 5 x 10(6) M-1 in low salt, and the affinity was 20-fold less at ionic strengths close to physiological conditions. In the presence of actin, the affinity of caldesmon to tropomyosin was increased 5-fold. The addition of tropomyosin also changed the fluorescence spectrum of pyrene-caldesmon bound to actin filaments. The change in the conformation of tropomyosin, caused by the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin, was studied with pyrene-labeled tropomyosin. Fluorescence change was evident when unlabeled caldesmon was added to pyrene-tropomyosin bound to actin. These data suggest that the interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin on the actin filament is associated with conformational changes on these thin filament associated proteins. These conformational changes may modulate the ability of thin filament to interact with myosin heads.  相似文献   

7.
Role of desmin filaments in chicken cardiac myofibrillogenesis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Desmin filaments are muscle-specific intermediate filaments located at the periphery of the Z-discs, and they have been postulated to play a critical role in the lateral registration of myofibrils. Previous studies suggest that intermediate filaments may be involved in titin assembly during the early stages of myofibrillogenesis. In order to investigate the putative function of desmin filaments in myofibrillogenesis, rabbit anti-desmin antibodies were introduced into cultured cardiomyocytes by electroporation to perturb the normal function of desmin filaments. Changes in the assembly of several sarcomeric proteins were examined by immunofluorescence. In cardiomyocytes incorporated with normal rabbit serum, staining for alpha-actinin and muscle actin displayed the typical Z-line and I-band patterns, respectively, while staining for titin with monoclonal anti-titin A12 antibody, which labels a titin epitope at the A-I junction, showed the periodic doublet staining pattern. Staining for C-protein gave an amorphous pattern in early cultures and identified A-band doublets in older cultures. In contrast, in cardiomyocytes incorporated with anti-desmin antibodies, alpha-actinin was found in disoriented Z-discs and the myofibrils became fragmented, forming mini-sarcomeres. In addition, titin was not organized into the typical A-band doublet, but appeared to be aggregated. Muscle actin staining was especially weak and appeared in tiny clusters. Moreover, in all ages of cardiomyocytes tested, C-protein remained in the disassembled form. The present data suggest the essential role of desmin in myofibril assembly.  相似文献   

8.
Electron microscopy has shown that cross-bridges (CBs) are formed at the target zone that is periodically distributed on the thin filament in striated muscle. Here, by manipulating a single bead-tailed actin filament with optical tweezers, we measured the unbinding events of rigor CBs one by one on the surface of the A-band in rabbit skeletal myofibrils. We found that the spacings between adjacent CBs were not always the same, and instead were 36, 72, or 108 nm. Tropomyosin and troponin did not affect the CB spacing except for a relative increase in the appearance of longer spacing in the presence of Ca2+. In addition, in an in vitro assay where myosin molecules were randomly distributed, were obtained the same spacing, i.e., a multiple of 36 nm. These results indicate that the one-dimensional distribution of CBs matches with the 36-nm half pitch of a long helical structure of actin filaments. A stereospecific model composed of three actin protomers per target zone was shown to explain the experimental results. Additionally, the unbinding force (i.e., the binding affinity) of CBs for the reconstituted thin filaments was found to be larger and smaller relative to that for actin filaments with and without Ca2+, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Interaction of alpha-actinin, filamin and tropomyosin with F-actin   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The abilities of alpha-actinin, filamin and tropomyosin to bind F-actin were examined by cosedimentation experiments. Results indicated that smooth muscle alpha-actinin and filamin can bind to actin filaments simultaneously with little evidence of competition. In contrast, tropomyosin exhibits marked competition with either filamin or alpha-actinin for sites on actin filaments.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. A light and electron immunohistochemical study was carried out on the body wall muscles of the chaetognath Sagitta friderici for the presence of a variety of contractile proteins (myosin, paramyosin, actin), regulatory proteins (tropomyosin, troponin), and structural proteins (α‐actinin, desmin, vimentin). The primary muscle (~80% of body wall volume) showed the characteristic structure of transversely striated muscles, and was comparable to that of insect asynchronous flight muscles. In addition, the body wall had a secondary muscle with a peculiar structure, displaying two sarcomere types (S1 and S2), which alternated along the myofibrils. S1 sarcomeres were similar to those in the slow striated fibers of many invertebrates. In contrast, S2 sarcomeres did not show a regular sarcomeric pattern, but instead exhibited parallel arrays of 2 filament types. The thickest filaments (~10–15 nm) were arranged to form lamellar structures, surrounded by the thinnest filaments (~6 nm). Immunoreactions to desmin and vimentin were negative in both muscle types. The primary muscle exhibited the classical distribution of muscle proteins: actin, tropomyosin, and troponin were detected along the thin filaments, whereas myosin and paramyosin were localized along the thick filaments; immunolabeling of α‐actinin was found at Z‐bands. Immunoreactions in the S1 sarcomeres of the secondary muscle were very similar to those found in the primary muscle. Interestingly, the S2 sarcomeres of this muscle were labeled with actin and tropomyosin antibodies, and presented no immunore‐actions to both myosin and paramyosin. α‐Actinin in the secondary muscle was only detected at the Z‐lines that separate S1 from S2. These findings suggest that S2 are not true sarcomeres. Although they contain actin and tropomyosin in their thinnest filaments, their thickest filaments do not show myosin or paramyosin, as the striated muscle thick myofilaments do. These peculiar S2 thick filaments might be an uncommon type of intermediate filament, which were labeled neither with desmin or vimentin antibodies.  相似文献   

11.
alpha-Actinin purified from chicken gizzard smooth muscle was characterized in comparison with alpha-actinins from chicken striated muscles, or fast-skeletal muscle, slow-skeletal muscle, and cardiac muscle. The gizzard alpha-actinin molecule consisted of two apparently identical subunits with a molecular weight of 100,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, as do striated-muscle alpha-actinins. Its isoelectric points in the presence of urea were similar to the striated-muscle counterparts. Despite these similarities, distinctive amino acid sequences between smooth-muscle alpha-actinin and striated-muscle alpha-actinins were revealed by peptide mapping using limited proteolysis in SDS. Gizzard alpha-actinin was immunologically distinguished from striated-muscle alpha-actinins. Gizzard alpha-actinin formed bundles of gizzard F-actin as well as of skeletal-muscle F-actin, but could not form any cross-bridges between adjacent actin filaments under conditions where skeletal-muscle alpha-actinin could. Temperature-dependent competition between gizzard alpha-actinin and tropomyosin on binding to gizzard thin filaments was demonstrated by electron microscopic observations. Gizzard alpha-actinin promoted Mg2+-ATPase activity of reconstituted skeletal actomyosin, gizzard acto-skeletal myosin, and gizzard actomyosin. This promoting effect was depressed by the addition of gizzard tropomyosin. These findings imply that, despite structural differences between gizzard and striated-muscle alpha-actinin molecules, they function similarly in vitro, and that gizzard alpha-actinin can interact not only with smooth-muscle actin (gamma- and beta-actin) but also with skeletal-muscle actin (alpha-actin).  相似文献   

12.
Both mu- and m-calpain (the micro- and millimolar Ca(2+)-requiring Ca(2+)-dependent proteinases) can completely remove Z-disks from skeletal muscle myofibrils and leave a space devoid of filaments in the Z-disk area. alpha-Actinin, a principal protein component of Z-disks, is removed from myofibrils by the calpains, and a 100-kDa polypeptide that comigrates in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with the alpha-actinin subunit is released into the supernatant. Purified calpain does not degrade purified actin or purified alpha-actinin as indicated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and by N- and C-terminal amino acid analysis of calpain-treated and untreated alpha-actinin and actin. The 100-kDa polypeptide released from myofibrils by calpain elutes identically with native alpha-actinin off DEAE-cellulose and hydroxyapatite columns and, after purification, binds to pure F-actin in the same manner that untreated, native alpha-actinin binds. Calpain-released alpha-actinin also accelerates the rate of superprecipitation of reconstituted actomyosin, a sensitive property characteristic of native alpha-actinin. Consequently, the calpains release alpha-actinin from the Z-disk of myofibrils without degrading it or without altering its ability to bind to actin. These results indicate that alpha-actinin does not simply cross-link thin filaments across the Z-disk but that at least one additional protein (or perhaps an altered actin or alpha-actinin) is involved in the alpha-actinin/actin interaction in Z-disks.  相似文献   

13.
T Keiser  A Wegner 《FEBS letters》1985,187(1):76-80
Tropomyosin was isolated from bovine brain using mild conditions thereby avoiding heat precipitation. Separation by DEAE ion exchange chromatography yielded a 33 kDa tropomyosin and a mixture of 30 and 32 kDa tropomyosin. Binding of the tropomyosins to actin filaments was measured by a newly developed method. The binding was assayed by the retarding effect of tropomyosin on actin polymerization. The 33 kDa tropomyosin was found to bind to actin filaments with considerably higher affinity than the 30 and 32 kDa tropomyosin.  相似文献   

14.
Tropomyosin inhibition of the rate of spontaneous polymerization of actin is associated with binding of tropomyosin to actin filaments. Rate constants determined by using a direct electron microscopic assay of elongation showed that alpha alpha- and alpha beta-tropomyosin have a small or no effect on the rate of elongation at either end of the filaments. The most likely explanation for the inhibition of the rate of polymerization of actin in bulk samples is that tropomyosin reduces the number of filament ends by mechanical stabilization of the filaments.  相似文献   

15.
Muscle contraction can be activated by the binding of myosin heads to the thin filament, which appears to result in thin filament structural changes. In vitro studies of reconstituted muscle thin filaments have shown changes in tropomyosin-actin geometry associated with the binding of myosin subfragment 1 to actin. Further information about these structural changes was obtained with fluorescence-detected linear dichroism of tropomyosin, which was labeled at Cys 190 with acrylodan and incorporated into oriented ghost myofibrils. The fluorescence from three sarcomeres of the fibril was collected with the high numerical aperture objective of a microscope and the dichroic ratio, R (0/90 degrees), for excitation parallel/perpendicular to the fibril, was obtained, which gave the average probe dipole polar angle, Theta. For both acrylodan-labeled tropomyosin bound to actin in fibrils and in Mg2+ paracrystals, Theta congruent to 52 degrees +/- 1.0 degrees, allowing for a small degree of orientational disorder. Binding of myosin subfragment 1 to actin in fibrils did not change Theta; i.e., the orientation of the rigidly bound probe on tropomyosin did not change relative to the actin axis. These data indicate that myosin subfragment 1 binding to actin does not appreciably perturb the structure of tropomyosin near the probe and suggest that the geometry changes are such as to maintain the parallel orientation of the tropomyosin and actin axes, a finding consistent with models of muscle regulation. Data are also presented for effects of MgADP on the orientation of labeled myosin subfragment 1 bound to actin in myofibrils.  相似文献   

16.
Tropomodulin is a pointed end capping protein for tropomyosin-coated actin filaments that is hypothesized to play a role in regulating the precise lengths of striated muscle thin filaments (Fowler, V. M., M. A. Sussman, P. G. Miller, B. E. Flucher, and M. P. Daniels. 1993. J. Cell Biol. 120:411-420; Weber, A., C. C. Pennise, G. G. Babcock, and V. M. Fowler. 1994, J. Cell Biol. 127:1627-1635). To gain insight into the mechanisms of thin filament assembly and the role of tropomodulin therein, we have characterized the temporal appearance, biosynthesis and mechanisms of assembly of tropomodulin onto the pointed ends of thin filaments during the formation of striated myofibrils in primary embryonic chick cardiomyocyte cultures. Our results demonstrate that tropomodulin is not assembled coordinately with other thin filament proteins. Double immunofluorescence staining and ultrastructural immunolocalization demonstrate that tropomodulin is incorporated in its characteristic sarcomeric location at the pointed ends of the thin filaments after the thin filaments have become organized into periodic I bands. In fact, tropomodulin assembles later than all other well characterized myofibrillar proteins studied including: actin, tropomyosin, alpha-actinin, titin, myosin and C-protein. Nevertheless, at steady state, a significant proportion (approximately 39%) of tropomodulin is present in a soluble pool throughout myofibril assembly. Thus, the absence of tropomodulin in some striated myofibrils is not due to limiting quantities of the protein. In addition, kinetic data obtained from [35S]methionine pulse-chase experiments indicate that tropomodulin assembles more slowly into myofibrils than does tropomyosin. This observation, together with results obtained using a novel permeabilized cell model for thin filament assembly, indicate that tropomodulin assembly is dependent on the prior association of tropomyosin with actin filaments. We conclude that tropomodulin is a late marker for the assembly of striated myofibrils in cardiomyocytes; its assembly appears to be linked to their maturity. We propose that tropomodulin is involved in maintaining and stabilizing the final lengths of thin filaments after they are assembled.  相似文献   

17.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2795-2801
In whole mount preparations of the 9 somite stage chick embryonic hearts that were immunofluorescently double labeled for titin and alpha- actinin, presumptive myofibrils were recognized as rows of several periodically aligned titin spots. Within these titin spots, smaller alpha-actinin dots were observed. These periodical arrangements of titin spots and alpha-actinin dots were not found in the 7 somite stage hearts. In wide myofibrils in the 10 somite stage hearts, the alpha- actinin dots and titin spots simultaneously became 'lines.' To study the ultrastructural features of the titin-positive regions in the 6-9 somite stage hearts, the thoracic portions of the embryos were immunofluorescently labeled for titin and embedded in resin. Ultrathin sections were mounted on electron microscopic grids and examined in immunofluorescence optics. The titin-positive regions thus identified were then examined in the electron microscope. No readily discernable specific ultrastructural features were found in titin-positive regions of the 6 somite stage cardiac primodia. Examination of the sections of the 9 somite stage hearts, on the other hand, revealed the occasional presence of small dense bodies, Z bodies, in the titin-positive regions. These observations strongly suggest that these Z bodies are the ultrastructural counterparts of the alpha-actinin dots seen by immunofluorescence optics and that they are formed nearly at the time of the formation of the first myofibrils. In some of the nascent myofibrils the Z bodies were found to be considerably narrower than the myofibrils, implying that the Z bodies are required not for the assembly of myofibrils per se but for their stabilization. Immunofluorescent labeling for titin and alpha-actinin revealed that the length of the shortest sarcomeres in the first myofibrils is approximately 1.5 micron, approximately the width of the A bands of mature myofibrils. The possibility that the A bands might define the initial length of nascent sarcomeres was indicated.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence for direct binding of vinculin to actin filaments   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
K Ruhnau  A Wegner 《FEBS letters》1988,228(1):105-108
The interaction of vinculin with actin filaments was investigated by methods which exclude interference by contaminating proteins which may occur in vinculin preparations. Vinculin which was blotted from SDS-polyacrylamide gels onto nitrocellulose, was stained specifically by fluorescently labeled polymeric actin (100 mM KCl, 2 mM MgCl2). Vinculin which was purified from alpha-actinin and an actin polymerization-inhibiting protein (HA1), was found to be cosedimented with polymeric actin. Maximally one vinculin molecule was cosedimented per one hundred actin filament subunits. Half maximal binding of vinculin was observed at about 0.25 microM free vinculin. Vinculin could be replaced from actin by the addition of tropomyosin.  相似文献   

19.
The length and spatial organization of thin filaments in skeletal muscle sarcomeres are precisely maintained and are essential for efficient muscle contraction. While the major structural components of skeletal muscle sarcomeres have been well characterized, the mechanisms that regulate thin filament length and spatial organization are not well understood. Tropomodulin is a new, 40.6-kD tropomyosin-binding protein from the human erythrocyte membrane skeleton that binds to one end of erythrocyte tropomyosin and blocks head-to-tail association of tropomyosin molecules along actin filaments. Here we show that rat psoas skeletal muscle contains tropomodulin based on immunoreactivity, identical apparent mobility on SDS gels, and ability to bind muscle tropomyosin. Results from immunofluorescence labeling of isolated myofibrils at resting and stretched lengths using anti-erythrocyte tropomodulin antibodies indicate that tropomodulin is localized at or near the free (pointed) ends of the thin filaments; this localization is not dependent on the presence of myosin thick filaments. Immunoblotting of supernatants and pellets obtained after extraction of myosin from myofibrils also indicates that tropomodulin remains associated with the thin filaments. 1.2-1.6 copies of muscle tropomodulin are present per thin filament in myofibrils, supporting the possibility that one or two tropomodulin molecules may be associated with the two terminal tropomyosin molecules at the pointed end of each thin filament. Although a number of proteins are associated with the barbed ends of the thin filaments at the Z disc, tropomodulin is the first protein to be specifically located at or near the pointed ends of the thin filaments. We propose that tropomodulin may cap the tropomyosin polymers at the pointed end of the thin filament and play a role in regulating thin filament length.  相似文献   

20.
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