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1.
J Leszyk  J H Collins  P C Leavis  T Tao 《Biochemistry》1987,26(22):7042-7047
We have used the sulfhydryl-specific, heterobifunctional, photoactivatable cross-linker 4-maleimidobenzophenone (BPMal) to study the interaction of rabbit skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) and troponin I (TnI). TnC was specifically labeled at Cys-98 by the maleimide moiety of BPMal, and a binary complex was formed with TnI in the presence of Ca2+. Upon photolysis, covalent cross-links were formed between TnC and TnI [Tao, T., Scheiner, C.J., & Lamkin, M. (1986) Biochemistry 25, 7633-7639]. The cross-linked heterodimer was digested with cyanogen bromide, pepsin, and chymotrypsin into progressively smaller cross-linked peptides, which were purified by HPLC and then characterized by amino acid analysis and sequencing. We obtained a fraction from the initial CNBr digest that contained the expected peptide CB9 (residues 84-135) of TnC, cross-linked mainly to CN4 (residues 96-116), the "inhibitory region" of TnI. The peptides CN1 and CN3 of TnI were also detected in this fraction, but their molar ratios (compared to CB9) were only about 0.15 each, compared to 0.60 for CN4. Sequence analyses of fractions obtained after peptic and chymotryptic digests of the cross-linked CNBr fraction confirmed that CB9 and CN4 were the major cross-linked species. Quantitative analysis of sequencer results indicated that the residues in TnI that appeared to be most highly cross-linked to Cys-98 of TnC were Arg-108 and Pro-110, and to a lesser extent Arg-103 and Lys-107. These findings are consistent with previous studies on interactions between TnI and TnC and provide, for the first time, direct information on the identities of proximate amino acids in the two proteins.  相似文献   

2.
Interactions between troponin C (TnC) and troponin I (TnI) play an important role in the Ca(2+)-dependent regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction. In the present study, we investigated the sites of interaction between the N-terminal regulatory domain of TnC and the inhibitory region (residues 96-116) of TnI, using a mutant rabbit skeletal TnC (designated as TnC57) that contains a single Cys at residue 57 in the C-helix. TnC57 was modified with the photoreactive cross-linker 4-maleimidobenzophenone (BP-Mal), and, after formation of a binary complex with TnI, cross-linking between the proteins was induced by photolysis. The resulting product was cleaved with CNBr and several proteases, and peptides containing cross-links were purified and subjected to amino acid sequencing. The results show that Cys-57 of TnC57 is cross-linked to the segment of TnI spanning residues 113-121. Previously, we showed that Cys-98 of TnC can be cross-linked via BP-Mal to TnI residues 103-110 (Leszyk, J., Collins, J.H., Leavis, P.C., and Tao, T. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 7042-7047). Taken together, these results demonstrate that both the C- and the N-terminal domains of TnC interact with the inhibitory region of TnI and are consistent with the hypothesis that, in a complex with TnI, TnC adopts a more compact conformation than in the crystal structure.  相似文献   

3.
Interactions between troponin C (TnC) and troponin I (TnI) play an important role in the Ca2(+)-dependent regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction. Previous attempts to elucidate the molecular details of TnC-TnI interactions, mainly involving chemically modified proteins or fragments thereof, have led to the widely accepted idea that the "inhibitory region" (residues 96-116) of TnI binds to an alpha-helical segment of TnC comprising residues 89-100 in the nonregulatory, COOH-terminal domain. In an attempt to identify other possible physiologically important interactions between these proteins, 1-ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide (EDC) was used to produce zero-length cross-links in the complex of rabbit skeletal muscle TnC and TnI. TnC was activated with EDC and N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) and then mixed with an equimolar amount of TnI [Grabarek, Z., & Gergely, J. (1988) Biophys. J. 53, 392a]. The resulting cross-linked TnCXI was cleaved with cyanogen bromide, trypsin, and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease (SAP). Cross-linked peptides were purified by reverse-phase HPLC and characterized by sequence analysis. The results indicated that residues from the regulatory Ca2(+)-binding site II in the NH2-terminal domain of TnC (residues 46-78) formed cross-links with TnI segments spanning residues 92-167. The most highly cross-linked residues in TnI were Lys-105 and Lys-107, located in the inhibitory region. These results yield the first evidence for an interaction between the N-terminal domain of TnC and the inhibitory region of TnI.  相似文献   

4.
H C Cheung  C K Wang  N A Malik 《Biochemistry》1987,26(18):5904-5907
We have determined the free energy of formation of the binary complexes formed between skeletal troponin C and troponin T (TnC.TnT) and between troponin T and troponin I (TnT.TnI). This was accomplished by using TnC fluorescently modified at Cys-98 with N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(5-sulfo-1-naphthyl)ethylenediamine for the first complex and TnI labeled at Cys-133 with the same probe for the other complex. The free energy of the ternary complex formed between troponin C and the binary complex TnT.TnI [TnC.(TnT.TnI)] was also measured by monitoring the emission of 5-(iodoacetamido)eosin attached to Cys-133 of the troponin I in TnT.TnI. The free energies were -9.0 kcal.mol-1 for TnC.TnT, -9.2 kcal.mol-1 for TnT.TnI, and -8.7 kcal.mol-1 for TnC.(TnT.TnI). In the presence of Mg2+ the free energies of TnC.TnT and TnC.(TnT.TnI) were -10.3 and -10.9 kcal.mol-1, respectively; in the presence of Ca2+ the corresponding free energies were -10.6 and -13.5 kcal.mol-1. Mg2+ and Ca2+ had negligible effect on the free energy of TnT.TnI. From these results the free energies of the formation of troponin from the three subunits were found to be -16.8 kcal.mol-1, -18.9 kcal.mol-1, and -21.6 kcal.mol-1 in the presence of EGTA, Mg2+, and Ca2+, respectively. Most of the free energy decrease caused by Ca2+ binding to the Ca2+-specific sites is derived from stabilization of the TnI-TnC linkage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The interactions between troponin subunits have been studied by intrinsic fluorescence and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The tryptophan fluorescence of troponin T (TnT) and troponin I (TnI) when complexed with troponin C (TnC) undergoes a Ca2+-dependent transition. The midpoints of such spectral changes occur at pCa approximately equal to 6, suggesting that the conformational change of TnT and TnI is induced by Ca2+ binding to the low-affinity sites of TnC. When TnC is labelled at Cys-98 with a maleimide spin probe (MSL), the spin signal is sensitive to Ca2+ binding to both the high and the low-affinity sites of TnC in the presence of either or both of the other two troponin subunits. Since Cys-98 is located in the vicinity of one of the high-affinity sites, these results are indicative of a long-range interaction between the two halves of the TnC molecule. Our earlier kinetic studies [Wang, C.-L. A., Leavis, P. C. & Gergely, J. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 9175-9177] have shown such interactions in TnC alone. Since the ESR spectral change associated with metal binding to the low-affinity sites is only observed when MSL-TnC is complexed with TnT and/or TnI, this long-range interaction within TnC appears to be mediated through the other troponin subunits.  相似文献   

6.
The binding of the NH2-terminal region of troponin T (TnT) to the COOH-terminal region of tropomyosin (Tm) and the head-to-tail overlap between Tm molecules is thought to provide a pivotal link between troponin (Tn) and Tm (White, S.P., Cohen, C., and Phillips, G.N., Jr. (1987) Nature 325, 826-828). To further explore the structure-function relationship of the NH2-terminal region of TnT, we studied the binding of a 26,000-dalton TnT fragment (26K-TnT, Ohtsuki, I., Shiraishi, F., Suenaga, N., Miyata, T., and Tanokura, M.J. (1984) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 95, 1337-1342) which corresponds to residues 46-259 of TnT2f, the major isoform of TnT in rabbit fast twitch muscle, to immobilized alpha-Tm. Both 26K-TnT and TnT2f were retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column in the presence of 150 mM NaCl. However, upon increasing the NaCl concentration 26K-TnT was eluted from the column at a higher ionic strength than was TnT. When applied alone, the binary complex of TnI and TnC (TnC.TnI) was not retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column. When applied subsequently to prebound TnT2f or 26K-TnT, TnI.TnC was retained by the alpha-Tm affinity column and eluted together with TnT2f or 26K-TnT as ternary troponin complexes. Whether Ca2+ was present or not, Tn containing 26K-TnT was eluted at a higher ionic strength than was Tn containing TnT2f, indicating that removal of the first 45 residues of TnT2f strengthens the binding of Tn to Tm. In the presence of Tm, reconstituted Tn containing 26K-TnT conferred Ca2+ sensitivity on actomyosin-S1 MgATPase, and the steepness of the pCa-ATPase relation was unchanged with respect to the actoS1 ATPase regulated by TnT2f. It is concluded that the first 45 residues of TnT2f are not essential for anchoring the troponin complex to the thin filament and do not play a crucial role in the cooperative response of regulated actoS1 ATPase to Ca2+.  相似文献   

7.
Luo Y  Leszyk J  Li B  Gergely J  Tao T 《Biochemistry》2000,39(50):15306-15315
Skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) adopts an extended conformation when crystallized alone and a compact one when crystallized with an N-terminal troponin I (TnI) peptide, TnI(1-47) [Vassylyev et al. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 4847-4852]. The N-terminal region of TnI (residues 1-40) was suggested to play a functional role of facilitating the movement of TnI's inhibitory region between TnC and actin [Tripet et al. (1997) J. Mol. Biol. 271, 728-750]. To test this hypothesis and to investigate the conformation of TnC in the intact troponin complex and in solution, we attached fluorescence and photo-cross-linking probes to a mutant TnI with a single cysteine at residue 6. Distances from this residue to residues of TnC were measured by the fluorescence resonance energy transfer technique, and the sites of photo-cross-linking in TnC were determined by microsequencing and mass spectrometry following enzymatic digestions. Our results show that in the troponin complex neither the distance between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 89 nor the photo-cross-linking site in TnC, Ser133, changes with Ca(2+), in support of the notion that this region plays mainly a structural rather than a regulatory role. The distances to residues 12 and 41 in TnC's N-domain are both considerably longer than those predicted by the crystal structure of TnC.TnI(1-47), supporting an extended rather than a compact conformation of TnC. In the binary TnC.TnI complex and the presence of Ca(2+), Met43 in TnC's N-domain was identified as the photo-cross-linking site, and multiple distances between TnI residue 6 and TnC residue 41 were detected. This was taken to indicate increased flexibility in TnC's central helix and that TnC dynamically changes between a compact and an extended conformation when troponin T (TnT) is absent. Our results further emphasize the difference between the binary TnC.TnI and the ternary troponin complexes and the importance of using intact proteins in the study of structure-function relationships of troponin.  相似文献   

8.
Ca2+ regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction is initiated by conformational changes in the N-terminal, regulatory domain of the Ca2+-binding protein troponin C (TnC), altering the interaction of TnC with the other subunits of troponin complex, TnI and TnT. We have investigated the role of acidic amino acid residues in the N-terminal, regulatory domain of TnC in binding to the inhibitory region (residues 96-116) of TnI. We constructed three double mutants of TnC (E53A/E54A, E60A/E61A and E85A/D86A), in which pairs of acidic amino acid residues were replaced by neutral alanines, and measured their affinities for synthetic inhibitory peptides. These peptides had the same amino acid sequence as TnI segments 95-116, 95-119 or 95-124, except that the natural Phe-100 of TnI was replaced by a tryptophan residue. Significant Ca2+-dependent increases in the affinities of the two longer peptides, but not the shortest one, to TnC could be detected by changes in Trp fluorescence. In the presence of Ca2+, all the mutant TnCs showed about the same affinity as wild-type TnC for the inhibitory peptides. In the presence of Mg2+ and EGTA, the N-terminal, regulatory Ca2+-binding sites of TnC are unoccupied. Under these conditions, the affinity of TnC(E85A/D86A) for inhibitory peptides was about half that of wild-type TnC, while the other two mutants had about the same affinity. These results imply a Ca2+-dependent change in the interaction of TnC Glu-85 and/or Asp-86 with residues (117-124) on the C-terminal side of the inhibitory region of TnI. Since Glu-85 and/or Asp-86 of TnC have also been demonstrated to be involved in Ca2+-dependent regulation through interaction with TnT, this region of TnC must be critical for troponin function.  相似文献   

9.
Troponin I (TnI) is the inhibitory component of the striated muscle Ca2+ regulatory protein troponin (Tn). The other two components of Tn are troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+-binding component, and troponin T (TnT), the tropomyosin-binding component. We have used limited chymotryptic digestion to probe the local conformation of TnI in the free state, the binary TnC*TnI complex, the ternary TnC*. TnI*TnT (Tn) complex, and in the reconstituted Tn*tropomyosin*F-actin filament. The digestion of TnI alone or in the TnC*TnI complex produced initially two major fragments via a cleavage of the peptide bond between Phe100 and Asp101 in the so-called inhibitory region. In the ternary Tn complex cleavage occurred at a new site between Leu140 and Lys141. In the absence of Ca2+ this was followed by digestion of the 1-140 fragment at Leu122 and Met116. In the reconstituted thin filament the same fragments as in the case of the ternary complex were produced, but the rate of digestion was slower in the absence than in the presence of Ca2+. These results indicate firstly that in both free TnI and TnI complexed with TnC there is an exposed and flexible site in the inhibitory region. Secondly, TnT affects the conformation of TnI in the inhibitory region and also in the region that contains the 140-141 bond. Thirdly, the 140-141 region of TnI is likely to interact with actin in the reconstituted thin filament when Ca2+ is absent. These findings are discussed in terms of the role of TnI in the mechanism of thin filament regulation, and in light of our previous results [Y. Luo, J.-L. Wu, J. Gergely, T. Tao, Biochemistry 36 (1997) 13449-13454] on the global conformation of TnI.  相似文献   

10.
R H Ingraham  R S Hodges 《Biochemistry》1988,27(16):5891-5898
Rabbit and bovine cardiac troponin (Tn) subunits and complexes were labeled with iodo[14C]acetamide in the presence and absence of Ca2+ to determine the effect of tertiary and quaternary structure on exposure of Cys SH groups. This procedure serves both to map regions of subunit interaction and the effects of Ca2+-induced conformational change and to indicate which Cys residues should be useful attachment sites for spectroscopic or cross-linking probes. After being labeled, Tn subunits were purified by using reversed-phase HPLC and subjected to tryptic cleavage with or without prior citraconylation. Cys-containing fragments were isolated by RP-HPLC, and the percent labeling was determined. Cys-75 and -92 of TnI were completely accessible to iodoacetamide both when TnI was labeled alone or when in the TnC-TnI complex. Both residues were largely inaccessible when Tn or the TnI-TnT complex was labeled, suggesting burial in the TnI-TnT interface. In contrast, the Cys from the N-terminal region of bovine TnT was stoichiometrically labeled when TnT was labeled alone, in native Tn or in a troponin-tropomyosin complex. Cys-35 and -84 of TnC are located in the nonfunctional Ca2+ binding loop I of cardiac TnC and helix D, respectively. For TnC alone, the percent labelings of Cys-35 and -84 were 11% and 26%, respectively (minus Ca2+), and 16% and 63%, respectively (plus Ca2+). For TnC labeled within Tn, the percent labelings of Cys-35 and -84 were 20% and 52%, respectively (minus Ca2+), and 20% and 78%, respectively (plus Ca2+).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Muscular contraction is triggered by an increase in calcium concentration, which is transmitted to the contractile proteins by the troponin complex. The interactions among the components of the troponin complex (troponins T, C, and I) are essential to understanding the regulation of muscle contraction. While the structure of TnC is well known, and a model for the binary TnC.TnI complex has been recently published (Tung, C.-S., Wall, M. E., Gallagher, S. C., and Trewhella, J. (2000) Protein Sci. 9, 1312-1326), very little is known about TnT. Using non-denaturing gels and NMR spectroscopy, we have analyzed the interactions between TnC and five peptides from TnT as well as how three TnI peptides affect these interactions. Rabbit fast skeletal muscle peptide TnT-(160-193) binds to TnC with a dissociation constant of 30 +/- 6 microm. This binding still occurs in the presence of TnI-(1-40) but is prevented by the presence of TnI-(56-115) or TnI-(96-139), both containing the primary inhibitory region of TnI. TnT-(228-260) also binds TnC. The binding site for TnT-(160-193) is located on the C-terminal domain of TnC and was mapped to the surface of TnC using NMR chemical shift mapping techniques. In the context of the model for the TnC.TnI complex, we discuss the interactions between TnT and the other troponin subunits.  相似文献   

12.
Troponin I (TnI) is the inhibitory component of troponin, the ternary complex that regulates skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction. Previous work showed that the C-terminal region of TnI, when linked to the "inhibitory region" (residues 98-116), possesses the major regulatory functions of the molecule (Farah, C. S., Miyamoto, C. A., Ramos, C. H. I., Silva, A. C. R., Quaggio, R. B., Fujimori, K., Smillie, L. B., and Reinach, F. C. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 5230-5240). To investigate these functions in more detail, serial deletion mutants of the C-terminal region of TnI were constructed. These experiments showed that longer C-terminal deletions result in lower inhibition of the actomyosin ATPase activity and weaken the interaction with the N-terminal domain of troponin C (TnC), consistent with the antiparallel model for the interaction between these two proteins. The conclusion is that the whole C-terminal region of TnI is necessary for its full regulatory activity. The region between residues 137 and 144, which was shown to have homology with residues 108-115 in the inhibitory region (Farah, C. S., and Reinach, F. C. (1995) FASEB J. 9, 755-767), is involved in the binding to TnC. The region between residues 98 and 129 is involved in modulating the affinity of TnC for calcium. The C-terminal residues 166-182 are involved in the binding of TnI to thin filament. A model for the function of TnI is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The contraction of vertebrate striated muscle is modulated by Ca(2+) binding to the regulatory protein troponin C (TnC). Ca(2+) binding causes conformational changes in TnC which alter its interaction with the inhibitory protein troponin I (TnI), initiating the regulatory process. We have used the frequency domain method of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to measure distances and distance distributions between specific sites in the TnC-TnI complex in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) or Mg(2+). Using sequences based on rabbit skeletal muscle proteins, we prepared functional, binary complexes of wild-type TnC and a TnI mutant which contains no Cys residues and a single Trp residue at position 106 within the TnI inhibitory region. We used TnI Trp-106 as the FRET donor, and we introduced energy acceptor groups into TnC by labeling at Met-25 with dansyl aziridine or at Cys-98 with N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(1-sulfo-5-naphthyl)ethylenediamine. Our distance distribution measurements indicate that the TnC-TnI complex is relatively rigid in the absence of Ca(2+), but becomes much more flexible when Ca(2+) binds to regulatory sites in TnC. This increased flexibility may be propagated to the whole thin filament, helping to release the inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity and allowing the muscle to contract. This is the first report of distance distributions between TnC and TnI in their binary complex.  相似文献   

14.
Recent structural studies of the troponin (Tn) core complex have shown that the regulatory head containing the N-lobe of TnC is connected to the IT arm by a flexible linker of TnC. The IT arm is a long coiled-coil formed by alpha-helices of TnI and TnT, plus the C-lobe of TnC. The TnT is thought to play a pivotal role in the linking of Ca(2+) -triggered conformational changes in thin filament regulatory proteins to the activation of cross-bridge cycling. However, a functional domain at the C-terminus of TnT is missing from the Tn core complex. In this study, we intended to determine the proximity relationship between the central helix of TnC and the TnT C-terminus in the binary and the ternary complex with and without Ca2+ by using pyrene excimer fluorescence spectroscopy and fluorescence resonance energy transfer. Chicken fast skeletal TnC contains a Cys102 at the E helix, while TnT has a Cys264 at its C-terminus. These two cysteines were specifically labeled with sulfhydryl-reactive fluorescence probes. The measured distance in the binary complex was about 19 Angstroms and slightly increased when they formed the ternary complex with TnI (20 Angstroms). Upon Ca2+ binding the distance was not affected in the binary complex but increased by approximately 4 Angstroms in the ternary complex. These results suggest that TnI plays an essential role in the Ca(2+) -mediated change in the spatial relationship between the C-lobe of TnC and the C-terminus of TnT.  相似文献   

15.
Luo Y  Li B  Yang G  Gergely J  Tao T 《Biochemistry》2002,41(42):12891-12898
We reported previously that both residues 48 and 82 on opposite sides of troponin-C's (TnC's) N-terminal regulatory hydrophobic cleft photo-cross-linked to Met121 of troponin-I (TnI) [Luo, Y., Leszyk, J., Qian, Y., Gergely, J., and Tao, T. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 6678-6688]. Here we report that the Ca2+-absent inhibitory activity of troponin (Tn) was progressively lost as the extent of photo-cross-linking increased. To extend these studies, we constructed a mutant TnI with a single cysteine at residue 121 (TnI121). In Tn complexes containing TnI121 and mutant TnCs with a single cysteine at positions 12, 48, 82, 98, or 125 (TnC12, TnC48 etc.), TnI121 formed disulfide cross-links primarily with TnC48 and TnC82 when Ca2+ was present, and with only TnC48 when Ca2+ was absent. These results indicate that TnI Met121 is situated within the N-domain hydrophobic cleft of TnC in the presence of Ca2+, and that it moves out of the cleft upon Ca2+ removal but remains within the vicinity of TnC. Activity assays revealed that the Met121 to Cys mutation in TnI121 reduced the Ca2+-present activation of Tn, indicating that Met121 is important in hydrophobic interactions between this TnI region and TnC's N-domain cleft. The formation of a disulfide cross-link between TnI121 and TnC48 or TnC82 abolished the Ca2+-absent inhibitory activity of Tn, indicating that the movement of the Met121 region of TnI out of TnC's N-domain cleft is essential for the occurrence of further events in the inhibitory process of skeletal muscle contraction. On the basis of these and other results, a simple mechanism for Ca2+ regulation of skeletal muscle contraction is presented and discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The fluorescence titration curve of skeletal muscle troponin containing TnI with 2-[4'-iodoacetamido)anilino)naphthalene-6-sulfonic acid-labeled Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 was composed of two transition curves. One transition occurred at the pCa region higher than 8.0, and the other between pCa 8.0 and 6.0. The transition at the lower pCa region had a midpoint of pCa 6.85, and the midpoint did not depend on Mg2+. The time course of the fluorescence change subsequent to the rapid pCa-jump of the solution was biphasic. The fast phase was due to the transition at the lower pCa region, and the rate constant of the process was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The slow phase was from the transition at the higher pCa region, and its rate constant was characteristic of the conformational change of the protein induced by Ca2+ binding to the high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. Therefore we can conclude that the fluorescence probe bound to Cys-48 and/or Cys-64 of TnI detects the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to both the low and high affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC. The fluorescence probe bound to Cys-133 of TnI or Met residues of TnT detected the conformational change of the Tn complex induced by Ca2+ binding to the low affinity Ca2+-binding sites of TnC.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction sites of rabbit skeletal troponin I (TnI) with troponin C (TnC), troponin T (TnT), tropomyosin (Tm) and actin were mapped systematically using nine single cysteine residue TnI mutants with mutation sites at positions 6, 48, 64, 89, 104, 121, 133, 155 or 179 (TnI6, TnI48 etc.). Each mutant was labeled with the heterobifunctional photocrosslinker 4-maleimidobenzophenone (BP-Mal), and incorporated into the TnI.TnC binary complex, the TnI.TnC.TnT ternary troponin (Tn) complex, and the Tn.Tm.F-actin synthetic thin filament. Photocrosslinking reactions carried out in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) yielded the following results: (1) BP-TnI6 photocrosslinked primarily to TnC with a small degree of Ca(2+)-dependence in all the complex forms. (2) BP-TnI48, TnI64 and TnI89 photocrosslinked to TnT with no Ca(2+)-dependence. Photocrosslinking to TnC was reduced in the ternary versus the binary complex. BP-TnI89 also photocrosslinked to actin with higher yields in the absence of Ca(2+) than in its presence. (3) BP-TnI104 and TnI133 photocrosslinked to actin with much higher yields in the absence than in the presence of Ca(2+). (4) BP-TnI121 photocrosslinked to TnC with a small degree of Ca(2+)-dependence, and did not photocrosslink to actin. (5) BP-TnI155 and TnI179 photocrosslinked to TnC, TnT and actin, but all with low yields. All the labeled mutants photocrosslinked to TnC with varying degrees of Ca(2+)-dependence, and none to Tm. These results, along with those published allowed us to construct a structural and functional model of TnI in the Tn complex: in the presence of Ca(2+), residues 1-33 of TnI interact with the C-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft of TnC, approximately 48-89 with TnT, approximately 90-113 with TnC's central helix, approximately 114-125 with TnC's N-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft, and approximately 130-150 with TnC's A-helix. In the absence of Ca(2+), residues approximately 114-125 move out of TnC's N-terminal domain hydrophobic cleft and trigger the movements of residues approximately 89-113 and approximately 130-150 away from TnC and towards actin.  相似文献   

18.
In muscle thin filaments, the inhibitory region (residues 96-117) of troponin I (TnI) is thought to interact with troponin C (TnC) in the presence of Ca(2+) and with actin in the absence of Ca(2+). To better understand these interactions, we prepared mutant TnIs which contained a single Cys-96 or Cys-117 and labeled them with the thiol-specific fluorescent probe N-(iodoacetyl)-N'-(1-sulfo-5-naphthyl)ethylenediamine (IAEDANS). We characterized the microenvironments of the AEDANS labels on TnI in the presence and absence of Ca(2+) by measuring the extent of acrylamide quenching of fluorescence and lifetime-resolved anisotropy. In the troponin-tropomyosin (Tn-Tm) complex, the AEDANS labels on both Cys-96 and Cys-117 were less accessible to solvent and less flexible in the presence of Ca(2+), reflecting closer interactions with TnC under these conditions. In reconstituted thin filaments, the environment of the AEDANS on Cys-96 was not greatly affected by Ca(2+), while the AEDANS on Cys-117 was more accessible but significantly less flexible as it moved away from actin and interacted strongly with TnC in the presence of Ca(2+). We used fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to measure distances between AEDANS on TnI Cys-96 or Cys-117 and 4-?[(dimethylamino)phenyl]azo?phenyl-4'-maleimide (DABmal) on actin Cys-374 in reconstituted thin filaments. In the absence of Ca(2+), the mean distances were 40.2 A for Cys-96 and 35.2 A for Cys-117. In the presence of Ca(2+), Cys-96 moved away from actin Cys-374 by approximately 3.6 A, while Cys-117 moved away by approximately 8 A. This suggests the existence of a flexible "hinge" region near the middle of TnI, allowing amino acid residues in the N-terminal half of TnI to interact with TnC in a Ca(2+)-independent manner, while the C-terminal half of TnI binds to actin in the absence of Ca(2+) or to TnC in the presence of Ca(2+). This is the first report to demonstrate structural movement of the inhibitory region of TnI in the thin filament.  相似文献   

19.
The troponin I peptide N alpha-acetyl TnI (104-115) amide (TnIp) represents the minimum sequence necessary for inhibition of actomyosin ATPase activity of skeletal muscle (Talbot, J.A. & Hodges, R.S. 1981, J. Biol. Chem. 256, 2798-3802; Van Eyk, J.E. & Hodges, R.S., 1988, J. Biol. Chem. 263, 1726-1732; Van Eyk, J.E., Kay, C.M., & Hodges, R.S., 1991, Biochemistry 30, 9974-9981). In this study, we have used 1H NMR spectroscopy to compare the binding of this inhibitory TnI peptide to a synthetic peptide heterodimer representing site III and site IV of the C-terminal domain of troponin C (TnC) and to calcium-saturated skeletal TnC. The residues whose 1H NMR chemical shifts are perturbed upon TnIp binding are the same in both the site III/site IV heterodimer and TnC. These residues include F102, I104, F112, I113, I121, I149, D150, F151, and F154, which are all found in the C-terminal domain hydrophobic pocket and antiparallel beta-sheet region of the synthetic site III/site IV heterodimer and of TnC. Further, the affinity of TnIp binding to the heterodimer (Kd = 192 +/- 37 microM) was found to be similar to TnIp binding to TnC (48 +/- 18 microM [Campbell, A.P., Cachia, P.J., & Sykes, B.D., 1991, Biochem. Cell Biol. 69, 674-681]). The results indicate that binding of the inhibitory region of TnI is primarily to the C-terminal domain of TnC. The results also indicate how well the synthetic peptide heterodimer mimics the C-terminal domain of TnC in structure and functional interactions.  相似文献   

20.
Troponin T (TnT) is an essential component of troponin (Tn) for the Ca(2+)-regulation of vertebrate striated muscle contraction. TnT consists of an extended NH(2)-terminal domain that interacts with tropomyosin (Tm) and a globular COOH-terminal domain that interacts with Tm, troponin I (TnI), and troponin C (TnC). We have generated two mutants of a rabbit skeletal beta-TnT 25-kDa fragment (59-266) that have a unique cysteine at position 60 (N-terminal region) or 250 (C-terminal region). To understand the spatial rearrangement of TnT on the thin filament in response to Ca(2+) binding to TnC, we measured distances from Cys-60 and Cys-250 of TnT to Gln-41 and Cys-374 of F-actin on the reconstituted thin filament by using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). The distances from Cys-60 and Cys-250 of TnT to Gln-41 of F-actin were 39.5 and 30.0 A, respectively in the absence of Ca(2+), and increased by 2.6 and 5.8 A, respectively upon binding of Ca(2+) to TnC. The rigor binding of myosin subfragment 1 (S1) further increased these distances by 4 and 5 A respectively, when the thin filaments were fully decorated with S1. This indicates that not only the C-terminal but also the N-terminal region of TnT showed the Ca(2+)- and S1-induced movement, and the C-terminal region moved more than N-terminal region. In the absence of Ca(2+), the rigor S1 binding also increased the distances to the same extent as the presence of Ca(2+) when the thin filaments were fully decorated with S1. The addition of ATP completely reversed the changes in FRET induced by rigor S1 binding both in the presence and absence of Ca(2+). However, plots of the extent of S1-induced conformational change vs. molar ratio of S1 to actin showed hyperbolic curve in the presence of Ca(2+) but sigmoidal curve in the absence of Ca(2+). FRET measurement of the distances from Cys-60 and Cys-250 of TnT to Cys-374 of actin showed almost the same results as the case of Gln-41 of actin. The present FRET measurements demonstrated that not only TnI but also TnT change their positions on the thin filament corresponding to three states of thin filaments (relaxed, Ca(2+)-induced or closed, and S1-induced or open states).  相似文献   

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