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1.
Vascular smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein, has been identified in diverse bovine tissues, including smooth and striated muscles and various nonmuscle tissues, by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of tissue homogenates and immunoblotting using rabbit anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon. Caldesmon was purified from vascular smooth muscle (bovine aorta) by heat treatment of a tissue homogenate, ion-exchange chromatography, and affinity chromatography on a column of immobilized calmodulin. The isolated protein shared many properties in common with chicken gizzard caldesmon: immunological cross-reactivity, Ca2+-dependent interaction with calmodulin, Ca2+-independent interaction with F-actin, competition between actin and calmodulin for caldesmon binding only in the presence of Ca2+, and inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin without affecting the phosphorylation state of myosin. Maximal binding of aorta caldesmon to actin occurred at 1 mol of caldesmon: 9-10 mol of actin, and binding was unaffected by tropomyosin. Half-maximal inhibition of the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase occurred at approximately 1 mol of caldesmon: 12 mol of actin. This inhibition was also unaffected by tropomyosin. Caldesmon had no effect on the Mg2+-ATPase activity of smooth muscle myosin in the absence of actin. Bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmons differed in several respects: Mr (149,000 for bovine aorta caldesmon and 141,000 for chicken gizzard caldesmon), extinction coefficient (E1%280nm = 19.5 and 5.0 for bovine aorta and chicken gizzard caldesmon, respectively), amino acid composition, and one-dimensional peptide maps obtained by limited chymotryptic and Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. In a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, using anti-chicken gizzard caldesmon, a 174-fold molar excess of bovine aorta caldesmon relative to chicken gizzard caldesmon was required for half-maximal inhibition. These studies establish the widespread tissue and species distribution of caldesmon and indicate that vascular smooth muscle caldesmon exhibits physicochemical differences yet structural and functional similarities to caldesmon isolated from chicken gizzard.  相似文献   

2.
The interactions of vascular smooth muscle caldesmon with actin, tropomyosin, and calmodulin were determined under conditions in which the four proteins can form reconstituted Ca2+-sensitive smooth muscle thin filaments. Caldesmon bound to actin in a complex fashion with high affinity sites (K = 10(7) M-1) saturating at a stoichiometry of 1 per 28 actins, and lower affinity sites at 1 per 7 actins. The affinity of binding was increased in the presence of tropomyosin, and this could be attributed to a direct interaction between caldesmon and tropomyosin which was demonstrated using caldesmon cross-linked to Sepharose. In the presence of tropomyosin, occupancy of the high affinity sites was associated with inhibition of actin-activated myosin MgATPase activity. Caldesmon was found to bind to calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+, with an affinity of 10(6) M-1. The binding of Ca2+ X calmodulin to caldesmon was associated with the neutralization of inhibition of actin-tropomyosin. Ca2+ X calmodulin binding reduced but did not abolish the binding of caldesmon to actin-tropomyosin. From this data we have proposed a model for smooth muscle thin filaments in which Ca2+ regulates activity by converting the inhibited actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon complex to the active complexes, actin-tropomyosin-caldesmon-calmodulin X Ca2+ and actin-tropomyosin.  相似文献   

3.
K Pritchard  C.J Moody 《Cell calcium》1986,7(5-6):309-327
The protein caldesmon, originally isolated from smooth muscle tissue where it is the most abundant calmodulin-binding protein, has since been shown to have a wide distribution in actin- and myosin- containing cells where it is localized in sub-cellular structures concerned with motility, shape changes and exo- or endo-cytosis. Caldesmon is believed to be an actin- regulatory protein, and binds with high affinity to actin or actin-tropomyosin. Caldesmon inhibits the activation by actin-tropomyosin of myosin MgATPase activity, and the inhibition can be reversed by Ca2+.calmodulin. The binding of caldesmon to smooth muscle proteins has been studied in detail, enabling a model to be constructed which could account for the observed Ca2+ regulation of smooth muscle thin filaments. The abundance of caldesmon, and the Ca2+-regulation of its activity via calmodulin, mean that it is potentially an important intracellular regulator of processes such as smooth muscle contraction, cell motility and secretion.  相似文献   

4.
Caldesmon, calmodulin-, and actin-binding protein of chicken gizzard did not affect the process of polymerization of actin induced by 0.1 M KCl. Caldesmon binds to F-actin, thus inhibiting the gelation action of actin binding protein (ABP; filamin). Low shear viscosity and flow birefringence measurements revealed that in a system of calmodulin, caldesmon, ABP, and F-actin, gelation occurs in the presence of micromolar Ca2+ concentrations, but not in the absence of Ca2+. Electron microscopic observations showed the Ca2+-dependent formation of actin bundles in this system. These results were interpreted by the flip-flop mechanism: in the presence of Ca2+, a calmodulin-caldesmon complex is released from actin filaments on which ABP exerts its gelating action. On the other hand, in the absence of Ca2+, caldesmon remains bound to actin filaments, thus preventing the action of ABP.  相似文献   

5.
The contractile state of smooth muscle is regulated primarily by the sarcoplasmic (cytosolic) free Ca2+ concentration. A variety of stimuli that induce smooth muscle contraction (e.g., membrane depolarization, alpha-adrenergic and muscarinic agonists) trigger an increase in sarcoplasmic free [Ca2+] from resting levels of 120-270 to 500-700 nM. At the elevated [Ca2+], Ca2+ binds to calmodulin, the ubiquitous and multifunctional Ca(2+)-binding protein. The interaction of Ca2+ with CaM induces a conformational change in the Ca(2+)-binding protein with exposure of a site(s) of interaction with target proteins, the most important of which in the context of smooth muscle contraction is the enzyme myosin light chain kinase. The interaction of calmodulin with myosin light chain kinase results in activation of the kinase that catalyzes phosphorylation of myosin at serine-19 of each of the two 20-kDa light chains (native myosin is a hexamer composed of two heavy chains (230 kDa each) and two pairs of light chains (one pair of 20 kDa each and the other pair of 17 kDa each)). This simple phosphorylation reaction triggers cycling of myosin cross-bridges along actin filaments and the development of force. Relaxation of the muscle follows removal of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasm, whereupon calmodulin dissociates from myosin light chain kinase regenerating the inactive kinase; myosin is dephosphorylated by myosin light chain phosphatase(s), whereupon it dissociates and remains detached from the actin filament and the muscle relaxes. A substantial body of evidence has been accumulated in support of this central role of myosin phosphorylation-dephosphorylation in the regulation of smooth muscle contraction. However, a wide range of physiological and biochemical studies supports the existence of additional, secondary Ca(2+)-dependent mechanisms that can modulate or fine-tune the contractile state of the smooth muscle cell. Three such mechanisms have emerged: (i) the actin-, tropomyosin-, and calmodulin-binding protein, calponin; (ii) the actin-, myosin-, tropomyosin-, and calmodulin-binding protein, caldesmon; and (iii) the Ca(2+)- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase C).  相似文献   

6.
We managed to develop a three-dimensional contractile model system using gizzard smooth muscle contractile elements. Phosphorylation of myosin was prerequisite for contraction. A high Mr actin-binding protein (ABP, or filamin), which cross-links actin filaments into a three-dimensional meshwork, was an essential factor for the three-dimensional contraction. Caldesmon suppressed contraction through the inhibition of the actin-ABP and actin-myosin interactions. Further, it was found that calmodulin could overcome the inhibitory effects of caldesmon on the above interactions, resulting in contraction. The possibility of this contractile model system being applied to nonmuscle contractile event is also discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Previous results from our laboratory have shown that 1) cultured rat cells contain two classes of tropomyosin (TM), one (high Mr TMs) with higher Mr values and greater affinity for actin than the other (low Mr TMs); 2) presaturation of F-actin with high Mr TMs, but not with low Mr TMs, inhibits both actin-severing and actin binding activities of gelsolin; and 3) nonmuscle caldesmon not only enhances the inhibitory effects of high Mr TMs but also makes low Mr TMs capable of inhibiting the severing activity of gelsolin (Ishikawa, R., Yamashiro, S., and Matsumura, F. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 7490-7497). These results suggest that gelsolin has much lower affinity for F-actin-TM-caldesmon complexes than for pure F-actin. We have therefore examined whether addition of TM and/or caldesmon to gelsolin-severed actin filaments can make gelsolin dissociate from barbed ends of actin filaments, resulting in annealing of short actin filaments into long ones. Flow birefringence and electron microscopic studies have suggested that high Mr TMs slowly and partially anneal gelsolin-severed actin fragments in 3 h, whereas low Mr TMs have no effects. Nonmuscle caldesmon greatly potentiates the effects of high Mr TMs and accelerates the process to 20 min, whereas nonmuscle caldesmon alone shows no effects. Furthermore, nonmuscle caldesmon makes low Mr TMs capable of reversing gelsolin-severing action. Actin binding assay has shown that gelsolin (or a gelsolin-actin complex) is dissociated from these annealed actin filaments. Smooth muscle TM and smooth muscle caldesmon also appear to anneal gelsolin-severed actin fragments as do high Mr TMs and nonmuscle caldesmon. Calmodulin decreases the potentiation effects of caldesmon as calmodulin inhibits actin binding of caldesmon. These results suggest that tropomyosin and caldesmon may regulate both capping and severing activities of gelsolin.  相似文献   

8.
Binding of caldesmon to smooth muscle myosin   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Caldesmon, a major calmodulin binding protein, was found to bind smooth muscle myosin. Addition of caldesmon to smooth muscle myosin induced the formation of small aggregates of myosin in the absence of Ca2+-calmodulin, but not in the presence of Ca2+-calmodulin. The binding site of myosin was studied by using caldesmon-Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography. Subfragment 1 was not retained by the column, while heavy meromyosin and subfragment 2 were bound to the caldesmon affinity column in the absence of Ca2+-calmodulin but not in its presence. It was therefore concluded that the binding site of caldesmon on myosin molecule was the subfragment 2 region and that binding of caldesmon to myosin was abolished in the presence of Ca2+ and calmodulin. Cross-linking of actin and myosin mediated by caldesmon was studied. While actomyosin was completely dissociated in the presence of Mg2+-ATP, the addition of caldesmon caused aggregation of the actomyosin. By low speed centrifugation at which actomyosin alone was not precipitated in the presence of Mg2+-ATP, the aggregate induced by caldesmon was precipitated and the composition of the precipitate was found to be actin, caldesmon, and myosin. In the presence of Mg2+-ATP, pure actin did not bind to a myosin-Sepharose 4B affinity column, while all of the actin was retained when the actin/caldesmon mixture was applied to the column. These results indicate that caldesmon can cross-link actin and myosin.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the effects of caldesmon, a major actin- and calmodulin-binding protein found in a variety of muscle and non-muscle tissues, on the various ATPase activities of skeletal-muscle myosin. Caldesmon inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase, and this inhibition was enhanced by tropomyosin. In the presence of the troponin complex and tropomyosin, caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-dependent actomyosin Mg2+-ATPase; this inhibition could be partly overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon, phosphorylated to the extent of approximately 4 mol of Pi/mol of caldesmon, inhibited the actin-activated myosin Mg2+-ATPase to the same extent as did non-phosphorylated caldesmon. Both inhibitions could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon also inhibited the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the absence of actin; this inhibition also could be overcome by Ca2+/calmodulin. Caldesmon inhibited the Ca2+-ATPase activity of skeletal-muscle myosin in the presence or absence of actin, at both low (0.1 M-KCl) and high (0.3 M-KCl) ionic strength. Finally, caldesmon inhibited the skeletal-muscle myosin K+/EDTA-ATPase at 0.1 M-KCl, but not at 0.3 M-KCl. Addition of actin resulted in no inhibition of this ATPase by caldesmon at either 0.1 M- or 0.3 M-KCl. These observations suggest that caldesmon may function in the regulation of actin-myosin interactions in striated muscle and thereby modulate the contractile state of the muscle. The demonstration that caldesmon inhibits a variety of myosin ATPase activities in the absence of actin indicates a direct effect of caldesmon on myosin. The inhibition of the actin-activated Mg2+-ATPase activity of myosin (the physiological activity) may not be due therefore simply to the binding of caldesmon to the actin filament causing blockage of myosin-cross-bridge-actin interaction.  相似文献   

10.
We have developed a simple and conventional purification method for caldesmon and MLC kinase from bovine arterial smooth muscle, and compared the arterial and gizzard proteins. Arterial caldesmon shares the alternative binding to calmodulin or F-actin in a Ca2+-dependent manner and the antigenic determinants with the gizzard protein. Both caldesmons have the same association constant with F-actin (1.3-1.7 X 10(7) M-1) and the same maximum binding (1 caldesmon per 12-14 actins). However, the molecular weight of arterial caldesmon (dimer of a 148 kDa polypeptides) was slightly different from that of gizzard caldesmon (heterodimer of 150/147 kDa polypeptides). The molecular weight of arterial MLC kinase (160 kDa) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (135 kDa). The enzyme activities of both MLC kinases were comparable (Km = 9.5 microM, Vmax = 12.5 mumol/min X mg). The association constant of the arterial enzyme to F-actin (5.1 X 10(6) M-1) was much larger than that of the gizzard enzyme (9.0 X 10(5) M-1) but the maximum binding was the same (1 enzyme per 12-13 actins). Immunocytochemical examinations showed that caldesmon and MLC kinase in cultured arterial cells have a restricted localization along the stress fibers, suggesting functional linkages between both proteins and actin filaments in vivo.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions of actin filaments with actin-binding protein (filamin) and caldesmon under the influence of tropomyosin were studied in detail using falling-ball viscometry, binding assay and electron microscopy. Caldesmon decreased the binding constant of filamin with F-actin. In contrast, the maximum binding ability of filamin to F-actin was decreased by tropomyosin. The filamin-induced gelation of actin filaments was inhibited by caldesmon. Tropomyosin also inhibited this gelation. The effect of caldesmon became stronger under the influence of tropomyosin. Furthermore, both caldesmon and tropomyosin additionally decreased the filamin binding to F-actin. From these results, caldesmon and tropomyosin appeared to influence filamin binding to F-actin with different modes of actin. In addition, there was no sign of direct interactions between filamin, caldesmon and tropomyosin as judged from gel filtration. Under the influence of caldesmon and tropomyosin, calmodulin conferred Ca2+ sensitivity on the filamin-induced gelation of actin filaments.  相似文献   

12.
Phosphorylation of caldesmon by protein kinase C   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Protein kinase C catalyzes phosphorylation of caldesmon, an F-actin binding protein of smooth muscle, in the presence of Ca2+ and phospholipid. Protein kinase C incorporates about 8 mol of phosphate/mol of chicken gizzard caldesmon. When calmodulin was added in the medium, there was an inhibition of phosphorylation. The fully phosphorylated, but not unphosphorylated, caldesmon inhibited myosin light chain kinase activity. The possibility that protein kinase C plays some role in smooth muscle contractile system through caldesmon, warrants further attention.  相似文献   

13.
Application of the myosin competition test (Lehman, W., and Szent-Gy?rgyi, A. G. (1975) J. Gen. Physiol. 66, 1-30) to chicken gizzard actomyosin indicated that this smooth muscle contains a thin filament-linked regulatory mechanism. Chicken gizzard thin filaments, isolated as described previously (Marston, S. B., and Lehman, W. (1985) Biochem. J. 231, 517-522), consisted almost exclusively of actin, tropomyosin, caldesmon, and an unidentified 32-kilodalton polypeptide in molar ratios of 1:1/6:1/26:1/17, respectively. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, these thin filaments conferred Ca2+ sensitivity (67.8 +/- 2.1%; n = 5) on the myosin Mg2+-ATPase. On the other hand, no Ca2+ sensitivity of the myosin Mg2+-ATPase was observed when purified gizzard actin or actin plus tropomyosin was reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin. Native thin filaments were rendered essentially free of caldesmon and the 32-kilodalton polypeptide by extraction with 25 mM MgCl2. When reconstituted with phosphorylated gizzard myosin, caldesmon-free thin filaments and native thin filaments exhibited approximately the same Ca2+ sensitivity (45.1 and 42.7%, respectively). The observed Ca2+ sensitivity appears, therefore, not to be due to caldesmon. Only trace amounts of two Ca2+-binding proteins could be detected in native thin filaments. These were identified as calmodulin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:733) and the 20-kilodalton light chain of myosin (present at a molar ratio to actin of 1:270). The Ca2+ sensitivity observed in an in vitro system reconstituted from gizzard thin filaments and either skeletal myosin or phosphorylated gizzard myosin is due, therefore, to calmodulin and/or an unidentified minor protein component of the thin filaments which may be an actin-binding protein involved in regulating actin filament structure in a Ca2+-dependent manner.  相似文献   

14.
Cloning and expression of a smooth muscle caldesmon   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Caldesmon is a smooth muscle and nonmuscle regulatory protein that interacts with actin, myosin, tropomyosin, and calmodulin. Two overlapping clones, isolated from a chicken oviduct cDNA plasmid library and a chicken gizzard cDNA lambda NM1149 library, were used to generate a 4108-base pair sequence coding for one caldesmon. Expression of the coding sequence confirms this is one of the large smooth muscle caldesmons. The deduced protein molecular weight is 86.974, significantly less than the molecular weights estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The protein has a high content of Gly, Lys, Arg, and Ala; there are two cysteine residues, one at either end of the molecule. Comparison with the Protein Identification Resource database demonstrates a similarity with a tropomyosin binding domain of troponin T, but none with any calmodulin or actin binding proteins. The center of the protein has an 8-fold repeat of a 13 amino acid sequence whose general motif is -Glu3-(Lys/Arg)2-Ala2-Glu2-(Lys/Arg)1-X-(Lys/Arg)1-Ala1-, where X is Glu, Gln, or Ala. Comparison with peptide sequences from a chymotryptic fragment that binds actin and calmodulin places this domain on the C terminus of caldesmon adjacent to the troponin T similarity. A tentative map of the major binding domains is proposed on the basis of available data.  相似文献   

15.
Caldesmon is known to inhibit actomyosin ATPase and filament sliding in vitro, and may play a role in modulating smooth muscle contraction as well as in diverse cellular processes including cytokinesis and exocytosis. However, the structural basis of caldesmon action has not previously been apparent. We have recorded electron microscope images of negatively stained thin filaments containing caldesmon and tropomyosin which were isolated from chicken gizzard smooth muscle in EGTA. Three-dimensional helical reconstructions of these filaments show actin monomers whose bilobed shape and connectivity are very similar to those previously seen in reconstructions of frozen-hydrated skeletal muscle thin filaments. In addition, a continuous thin strand of density follows the long-pitch actin helices, in contact with the inner domain of each actin monomer. Gizzard thin filaments treated with Ca2+/calmodulin, which dissociated caldesmon but not tropomyosin, have also been reconstructed. Under these conditions, reconstructions also reveal a bilobed actin monomer, as well as a continuous surface strand that appears to have moved to a position closer to the outer domain of actin. The strands seen in both EGTA- and Ca2+/calmodulin-treated filaments thus presumably represent tropomyosin. It appears that caldesmon can fix tropomyosin in a particular position on actin in the absence of calcium. An influence of caldesmon on tropomyosin position might, in principle, account for caldesmon's ability to modulate actomyosin interaction in both smooth muscles and non-muscle cells.  相似文献   

16.
C W Smith  S B Marston 《FEBS letters》1985,184(1):115-119
The Ca2+-sensitive thin filaments of aorta smooth muscle have been, disassembled into their constituent proteins, actin, tropomyosin and a 120-kDa protein. The 120-kDa protein bound to aorta actin-tropomyosin and inhibited its ability to activate myosin MgATPase. This inhibition correlated with the binding of one 120-kDa protein molecule per 29 actin monomers. Upon the addition of calmodulin to the actin-tropomyosin-120-kDa protein complex, the inhibition was relieved in 10(-4) M Ca2+ but not 10(-9) M Ca2+. The full release of inhibition was not accompanied by a full release of 120-kDa protein binding to actin-tropomyosin. A fully active, Ca2+-sensitive aorta thin filament has thus been reconstituted from just four components: actin, tropomyosin, 120-kDa protein and calmodulin.  相似文献   

17.
A caldesmon (CaD)-binding protein of about 65 kDa (by SDS-PAGE) was purified from smooth muscle of chicken gizzard. The 65-kDa protein prevented the inhibitory effect of CaD on the ATP-dependent interaction between actin and myosin. Unlike the case with calmodulin (CaM), Ca2+ was not required for this effect. As reported in the preceding communication, myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), another well characterized protein that binds CaM, has CaD-like activity that modulates the interaction by binding to actin. The 65-kDa protein was also effective in relieving the modulation, while leaving unaffected the kinase activity that phosphorylates the light chain of smooth muscle myosin.  相似文献   

18.
ATP-dependent movement of actin filaments on smooth muscle myosin was investigated by using the in vitro motility assay method in which myosin was fixed on the surface of a coverslip in a phosphorylated or an unphosphorylated state. Actin filaments slid on gizzard myosin phosphorylated with myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) at a rate of 0.35 micron/s, but did not slide at all on unphosphorylated myosin. The movement of actin filaments on phosphorylated myosin was stopped by perfusion of phosphatase. Subsequent perfusion with a solution containing MLCK, calmodulin, and Ca2+ enabled actin filaments to move again. The sliding velocities on monophosphorylated and diphosphorylated myosin by MLCK were not different. Actin filaments did not move on myosin phosphorylated with protein kinase C (PKC). The sliding velocity on myosin phosphorylated with both MLCK and PKC was identical to that on myosin phosphorylated only with MLCK. Gizzard tropomyosin enhanced the sliding velocity to 0.76 micron/s. Gizzard caldesmon decreased the sliding velocity with increase in its concentration. At a 5-fold molar ratio of caldesmon to actin, the movement stopped completely. This inhibitory effect of caldesmon was relieved upon addition of excess calmodulin and Ca2+.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphorylation of caldesmon by cdc2 kinase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A recent report that mitosis-specific phosphorylation causes the nonmuscle caldesmon to dissociate from microfilaments (Yamashiro, S., Yamakita, Y., Ishikawa, R., and Matsumura, F. (1990) Nature 344, 675-678) suggests that this process may contribute to the major structural reorganization of the eukaryotic cell at mitosis. In this study we have demonstrated that smooth muscle caldesmon is phosphorylated in vitro by cdc2 kinase from mitotic phase HeLa cells to 1.2 mol of phosphate/mol of caldesmon. Tryptic maps showed three major phosphorylated spots and approximately equal amounts of phosphorylated Ser and Thr were identified. F-actin or calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+ blocks the phosphorylation of caldesmon. Phosphorylation of caldesmon greatly reduced its binding to F-actin. The phosphorylation sites were located in a 10,000-Da CnBr fragment at the COOH-terminal end of the caldesmon molecule known to house the binding sites for actin and calmodulin (Bartegi A., Fattoum, A., Derancourt, J., and Kassab, R. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 15231-15238). Our finding supports the model that phosphorylation of caldesmon by cdc2 kinase at mitosis may contribute to the disassembly of the microfilament bundles during prophase.  相似文献   

20.
Multiple isoforms of tropomyosin (TM) of rat cultured cells show differential effects on actin-severing activity of gelsolin. Flow birefringence measurements have revealed that tropomyosin isoforms with high Mr values (high Mr TMs) partially protect actin filaments from fragmentation by gelsolin, while tropomyosins with low Mr values (low Mr TMs) have no significant protection even when the actin filaments have been fully saturated with low Mr TMs. We have also examined effect of nonmuscle caldesmon on the severing activity of gelsolin because 83-kDa nonmuscle caldesmon stimulates actin binding of rat cell TMs (Yamashiro-Matsumura, S., and Matsumura, F. (1988) J. Cell Biol. 106, 1973-1983). While nonmuscle caldesmon alone or low Mr TMs alone show no significant protection against fragmentation by gelsolin, the low Mr TMs coupled with 83-kDa protein are able to protect actin filaments. Further, high Mr TMs together with 83-kDa protein appear to block the severing activity completely. Electron microscopic analyses of length distribution of actin filaments have confirmed the results. The average length of control actin filaments is measured as 1.46 +/- microns, and gelsolin shortens the average length to 0.084 +/- 0.039 micron. Similar short average lengths are obtained when gelsolin severs actin complexed with low Mr TMs (0.080 +/- 0.045 micron) or with nonmuscle caldesmon (0.11 +/- 0.072 micron) while longer average length (0.22 +/- 0.18 micron) is measured in the presence of high Mr TMs. The simultaneous addition of nonmuscle caldesmon makes the average length considerably longer, i.e. 0.61 +/- 0.37 micron in the presence of low Mr TMs and 1.57 +/- 0.97 micron in the presence of high Mr TMs. Furthermore, the actin binding of gelsolin is strongly inhibited by co-addition of high Mr TMs and nonmuscle caldesmon. These results suggest that TM and gelsolin share the same binding site on actin molecules and that the differences in the actin affinities between TMs are related to their abilities of protection against gelsolin.  相似文献   

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