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1.
Calcium binding to chicken recombinant skeletal muscle TnC (TnC) and its mutants containing tryptophan (F29W), 5-hydroxytryptophan (F29HW), or 7-azatryptophan (F29ZW) at position 29 was measured by flow dialysis and by fluorescence. Comparative analysis of the results allowed us to determine the influence of each amino acid on the calcium binding properties of the N-terminal regulatory domain of the protein. Compared with TnC, the Ca(2+) affinity of N-terminal sites was: 1) increased 6-fold in F29W, 2) increased 3-fold in F29ZW, and 3) decreased slightly in F29HW. The Ca(2+) titration of F29ZW monitored by fluorescence displayed a bimodal curve related to sequential Ca(2+) binding to the two N-terminal Ca(2+) binding sites. Single and double mutants of TnC, F29W, F29HW, and F29ZW were constructed by replacing aspartate by alanine at position 30 (site I) or 66 (site II) or both. Ca(2+) binding data showed that the Asp --> Ala mutation at position 30 impairs calcium binding to site I only, whereas the Asp --> Ala mutation at position 66 impairs calcium binding to both sites I and II. Furthermore, the Asp --> Ala mutation at position 30 eliminates the differences in Ca(2+) affinity observed for replacement of Phe at position 29 by Trp, 5-hydroxytryptophan, or 7-azatryptophan. We conclude that position 29 influences the affinity of site I and that Ca(2+) binding to site I is dependent on the previous binding of metal to site II.  相似文献   

2.
Tikunova SB  Rall JA  Davis JP 《Biochemistry》2002,41(21):6697-6705
Troponin C (TnC) is an EF-hand Ca(2+) binding protein that regulates skeletal muscle contraction. The mechanisms that control the Ca(2+) binding properties of TnC and other EF-hand proteins are not completely understood. We individually substituted 27 Phe, Ile, Leu, Val, and Met residues with polar Gln to examine the role of hydrophobic residues in Ca(2+) binding and exchange with the N-domain of a fluorescent TnC(F29W). The global N-terminal Ca(2+) affinities of the TnC(F29W) mutants varied approximately 2340-fold, while Ca(2+) association and dissociation rates varied less than 70-fold and more than 45-fold, respectively. Greater than 2-fold increases in Ca(2+) affinities were obtained primarily by slowing of Ca(2+) dissociation rates, while greater than 2-fold decreases in Ca(2+) affinities were obtained by slowing of Ca(2+) association rates and speeding of Ca(2+) dissociation rates. No correlation was found between the Ca(2+) binding properties of the TnC(F29W) mutants and the solvent accessibility of the hydrophobic amino acids in the apo state, Ca(2+) bound state, or the difference between the two states. However, the effects of these hydrophobic mutations on Ca(2+) binding were contextual possibly because of side chain interactions within the apo and Ca(2+) bound states of the N-domain. These results demonstrate that a single hydrophobic residue, which does not directly ligate Ca(2+), can play a crucial role in controlling Ca(2+) binding and exchange within a coupled and functional EF-hand system.  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the roles of site I and II invariant Glu residues 41 and 77 in the functional properties and calcium-induced structural opening of skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) regulatory domain, we have replaced them by Ala in intact F29W TnC and in wild-type and F29W N domains (TnC residues 1-90). Reconstitution of intact E41A/F29W and E77A/F29W mutants into TnC-depleted muscle skinned fibers showed that Ca(2+)-induced tension is greatly reduced compared with the F29W control. Circular dichroism measurements of wild-type N domain as a function of pCa (= -log[Ca(2+)]) demonstrated that approximately 90% of the total change in molar ellipticity at 222 nm ([theta](222 nm)) could be assigned to site II Ca(2+) binding. With E41A, E77A, and cardiac TnC N domains this [theta](222 nm) change attributable to site II was reduced to < or =40% of that seen with wild type, consistent with their structures remaining closed in +Ca(2+). Furthermore, the Ca(2+)-induced changes in fluorescence, near UV CD, and UV difference spectra observed with intact F29W are largely abolished with E41A/F29W and E77A/F29W TnCs. Taken together, the data indicate that the major structural change in N domain, including the closed to open transition, is triggered by site II Ca(2+) binding, an interpretation relevant to the energetics of the skeletal muscle TnC and cardiac TnC systems.  相似文献   

4.
Cardiac troponin C belongs to the EF-hand superfamily of calcium-binding proteins and plays an essential role in the regulation of muscle contraction and relaxation. To follow calcium binding and exchange with the regulatory N-terminal domain (N-domain) of human cardiac troponin C, we substituted Phe at position 27 with Trp, making a fluorescent cardiac troponin C(F27W). Trp(27) accurately reported the kinetics of calcium association and dissociation of the N-domain of cardiac troponin C(F27W). To sensitize the N-domain of cardiac troponin C(F27W) to calcium, we individually substituted the hydrophobic residues Phe(20), Val(44), Met(45), Leu(48), and Met(81) with polar Gln. These mutations were designed to increase the calcium affinity of the N-domain of cardiac troponin C by facilitating the movement of helices B and C (BC unit) away from helices N, A, and D (NAD unit). As anticipated, these selected hydrophobic residue substitutions increased the calcium affinity of the regulatory domain of cardiac troponin C(F27W) approximately 2.1-15.2-fold. Surprisingly, the increased calcium affinity caused by the hydrophobic residue substitutions was largely due to faster calcium association rates (2.6-8.7-fold faster) rather than to slower calcium dissociation rates (1.2-2.9-fold slower). The regulatory N-domains of cardiac troponin C(F27W) and its mutants were also able to bind magnesium competitively and with physiologically relevant affinities (1.2-2.7 mm). The design of calcium-sensitizing cardiac troponin C mutants presented in this work enhances the understanding of how to control cation binding properties of EF-hand proteins and ultimately their structure and physiological function.  相似文献   

5.
Modifying Mg2+ binding and exchange with the N-terminal of calmodulin   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To follow Mg2+ binding to the N-terminal of calmodulin (CaM), we substituted Phe in position 19, which immediately precedes the first Ca2+/Mg2+ binding loop, with Trp, thus making F19WCaM (W-Z). W-Z has four acidic residues in chelating positions, two of which form a native Z-acid pair. We then generated seven additional N-terminal CaM mutants to examine the role of chelating acidic residues in Mg2+ binding and exchange with the first EF-hand of CaM. A CaM mutant with acidic residues in all of the chelating positions exhibited Mg2+ affinity similar to that of W-Z. Only CaM mutants that had a Z-acid pair were able to bind Mg2+ with physiologically relevant affinities. Removal of the Z-acid pair from the first EF-hand produced a dramatic 58-fold decrease in its Mg2+ affinity. Additionally, removal of the Z-acid pair led to a 1.8-fold increase in the rate of Mg2+ dissociation. Addition of an X- or Y-acid pair could not restore the high Mg2+ binding lost with removal of the Z-acid pair. Therefore, the Z-acid pair in the first EF-hand of CaM supports high Mg2+ binding primarily by increasing the rate of Mg2+ association.  相似文献   

6.
A spectral probe mutant (F29W) of chicken skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC) has been prepared in which Phe-29 has been substituted by Trp. Residue 29 is at the COOH-terminal end of the A helix immediately adjacent to the Ca2+ binding loop of site I (residues 30-41) of the regulatory N domain. Since this protein is naturally devoid of Tyr and Trp, spectral features can be assigned unambiguously to the single Trp. The fluorescent quantum yield at 336 nm is increased almost 3-fold in going from the Ca(2+)-free state to the 4Ca2+ state with no change in the wavelength of maximum emission. Comparisons of the Ca2+ titration curves of the change in far-UV CD and fluorescence emission indicated that the latter was associated only with the binding of 2Ca2+ to the regulatory sites I and II. No change in fluorescence was detected by titration with Mg2+. The Ca(2+)-induced transitions of both the N and C domains were highly cooperative. Addition of Ca2+ also produced a red shift in the UV absorbance spectrum and a reduction in positive ellipticity as monitored by near-UV CD measurements. The fluorescent properties of F29W were applied to an investigation of five double mutants: F29W/V45T, F29W/M46Q, F29W/M48A, F29W/L49T, and F29W/M82Q. Ca2+ titration of their fluorescent emissions indicated in each case an increased Ca2+ affinity of their N domains. The magnitude of these changes and the decreased cooperativity observed between Ca2+ binding sites I and II for some of the mutants are discussed in terms of the environment of the mutated residues in the 2Ca2+ and modeled 4Ca2+ states.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Interactions between troponin C and troponin I play a critical role in the regulation of skeletal muscle contraction and relaxation. We individually substituted 27 hydrophobic Phe, Ile, Leu, Val, and Met residues in the regulatory domain of the fluorescent troponin C(F29W) with polar Gln to examine the effects of these mutations on: (a) the calcium binding and dynamics of troponin C(F29W) complexed with the regulatory fragment of troponin I (troponin I(96-148)) and (b) the calcium sensitivity of force production. Troponin I(96-148) was an accurate mimic of intact troponin I for measuring the calcium dynamics of the troponin C(F29W)-troponin I complexes. The calcium affinities of the troponin C(F29W)-troponin I(96-148) complexes varied approximately 243-fold, whereas the calcium association and dissociation rates varied approximately 38- and approximately 33-fold, respectively. Interestingly, the effect of the mutations on the calcium sensitivity of force development could be better predicted from the calcium affinities of the troponin C(F29W)-troponin I(96-148) complexes than from that of the isolated troponin C(F29W) mutants. Most of the mutations did not dramatically affect the affinity of calcium-saturated troponin C(F29W) for troponin I(96-148). However, the Phe(26) to Gln and Ile(62) to Gln mutations led to >10-fold lower affinity of calcium-saturated troponin C(F29W) for troponin I(96-148), causing a drastic reduction in force recovery, even though these troponin C(F29W) mutants still bound to the thin filaments. In conclusion, elucidating the determinants of calcium binding and exchange with troponin C in the presence of troponin I provides a deeper understanding of how troponin C controls signal transduction.  相似文献   

8.
We report here on the stability and folding of the 91 residue alpha-helical F29W N-terminal domain of chicken skeletal muscle troponin C (TnC(1-91)F29W), the thin filament calcium-binding component. Unfolding was monitored by differential scanning calorimetry, circular dichroism, and intrinsic fluorescence spectroscopy using urea, pH, and temperature as denaturants, in the absence and in the presence of calcium. The unfolding of TnC(1-91)F29W was reversible and did not follow a two-state transition, suggesting that an intermediate may be present during this reaction. Our results support the hypothesis that intermediates are likely to occur during the folding of small proteins and domains. The physiological significance of the presence of an intermediate in the folding pathway of troponin C is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Calretinin (CR) is a neuronal EF-hand protein previously characterized as a calcium (micromolar affinity) binding protein. CR-containing neurons are spared in some neurodegenerative diseases, although it is as yet unconfirmed how CR plays an active role in this protection. Higher levels of some metal cations (e.g. copper and zinc) are associated with these diseases. At the same time, metals such as terbium (NMR and fluorescence) cadmium (NMR) and manganese (EPR) serve as useful calcium analogues in the study of EF-hand proteins. We survey the binding of the above-mentioned metal cations that might affect the structure and function of CR. Competitive 45Ca2+-overlay, competitive terbium fluorescence and intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence are used to detect the binding of metal cations to CR. Terbium and copper (half-maximal effect of 15 microM) bind to CR. Terbium has a similar or greater affinity for the calcium-binding sites of CR than calcium. Copper quenches the fluorescence of terbium-bound CR, and CR tryptophan residues and competes weakly for 45Ca2+-binding sites. Cadmium, magnesium, manganese and zinc bind less strongly (half-maximal effects above 0.1 mM). Therefore, only terbium appears to be a suitable analytical calcium analogue in further studies of CR. The principal conclusion of this work is that copper, in addition to calcium, might be a factor in the function of CR and a link between CR and neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

11.
A molecule of the photoreceptor Ca(2+)-binding protein recoverin contains four potential EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding sites, of which only two, the second and the third, are capable of binding calcium ions. We have studied the effects of substitutions in the second, third and fourth EF-hand sites of recoverin on its Ca(2+)-binding properties and some other characteristics, using intrinsic fluorescence, circular dichroism spectroscopy and differential scanning microcalorimetry. The interaction of the two operating binding sites of wild-type recoverin with calcium increases the protein's thermal stability, but makes the environment around the tryptophan residues more flexible. The amino acid substitution in the EF-hand 3 (E121Q) totally abolishes the high calcium affinity of recoverin, while the mutation in the EF-hand 2 (E85Q) causes only a moderate decrease in calcium binding. Based on this evidence, we suggest that the binding of calcium ions to recoverin is a sequential process with the EF-hand 3 being filled first. Estimation of Ca(2+)-binding constants according to the sequential binding scheme gave the values 3.7 x 10(6) and 3.1 x 10(5) M(-1) for third and second EF-hands, respectively. The substitutions in the EF-hand 2 or 3 (or in both the sites simultaneously) do not disturb significantly either tertiary or secondary structure of the apo-protein. Amino acid substitutions, which have been designed to restore the calcium affinity of the EF-hand 4 (G160D, K161E, K162N, D165G and K166Q), increase the calcium capacity and affinity of recoverin but also perturb the protein structure and decrease the thermostability of its apo-form.  相似文献   

12.
Troponin is the singular Ca2+-sensitive protein in the contraction of vertebrate striated muscles. Troponin C (TnC), the Ca2+-binding subunit of the troponin complex, has two distinct domains, C and N, which have different properties despite their extensive structural homology. In this work, we analyzed the thermodynamic stability of the isolated N-domain of TnC using a fluorescent mutant with Phe 29 replaced by Trp (F29W/N-domain, residues 1-90). The complete unfolding of the N-domain of TnC in the absence or presence of Ca2+ was achieved by combining high hydrostatic pressure and urea, a maneuver that allowed us to calculate the thermodynamic parameters (ΔV and ΔGatm). In this study, we propose that part of the affinity for Ca2+ is contributed by the free-energy change of folding of the N- and C-domains that takes place when Ca2+ binds. The importance of the free-energy change for the structural and regulatory functions of the TnC isolated domains was evaluated. Our results shed light on how the coupling between folding and ion binding contributes to the fine adjustment of the affinity for Ca2+ in EF-hand proteins, which is crucial to function.  相似文献   

13.
The N-terminal regulatory region of Troponin I, residues 1-40 (TnI 1-40, regulatory peptide) has been shown to have a biologically important function in the interactions of troponin I and troponin C. Truncated analogs corresponding to shorter versions of the N-terminal region (1-30, 1-28, 1-26) were synthesized by solid-phase methodology. Our results indicate that residues 1-30 of TnI comprises the minimum sequence to retain full biological activity as measured in the acto-S1-TM ATPase assay. Binding of the TnI N-terminal regulatory peptides (TnI 1-30 and the N-terminal regulatory peptide (residues 1-40) labeled with the photoprobe benzoylbenzoyl group, BBRp) were studied by gel electrophoresis and photochemical cross-linking experiments under various conditions. Fluorescence titrations of TnI 1-30 were carried out with TnC mutants that carry a single tryptophan fluorescence probe in either the N- or C-domain (F105W, F105W/C domain (88-162), F29W and F29W/N domain (1-90)) (Fig. 1). Low Kd values (Kd < 10(-7) M) were obtained for the interaction of F105W and F105W/C domain (88-162) with TnI 1-30. However, there was no observable change in fluorescence when the fluorescence probe was located at the N-domain of the TnC mutant (F29W and F29W/N domain (1-90)). These results show that the regulatory peptide binds strongly to the C-terminal domain of TnC.  相似文献   

14.
The spectral properties of three tryptophan-substituted mutants of recombinant chicken troponin C are compared. Site-specific mutagenesis was used to introduce a tryptophan residue into the high-affinity (Ca2+/Mg2+) domain of troponin C at residue position 105, thereby creating the mutant phenylalanine-105 to tryptophan (F105W). The spectral properties of F105W and a double mutant, F29W/F105W, were compared with the mutant phenylalanine-29 to tryptophan (F29W). Since wild-type chicken troponin C does not naturally contain either tyrosine or tryptophan residues, the tryptophan substitutions behaved as site-specific reporters of metal ion binding and conformational change. The residues that occupy positions 29 and 105 are at homologous locations in low-affinity and high-affinity domains, preceding the first liganding residues of binding loops I and III, respectively. Mutant proteins were examined by a combination of absorbance and fluorescence methods. Calcium induced significant changes in the near-UV absorbance spectra, fluorescence emission spectra, and far-UV circular dichroism of all three mutant proteins. Magnesium induced significant changes in the spectral properties of only F105W and F29W/F105W proteins. Tryptophan substitutions allowed Ca(2+)-specific and Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites to be titrated independently of one another. Results indicate that there is no interaction between the two binding domains under conditions where troponin C is isolated from the troponin complex. Magnesium-induced changes in the environment of the tryptophan reporter at position 105 were significantly different from those induced by calcium. This suggests that calcium and magnesium differ in their influence on the conformation of the high-affinity, Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites.  相似文献   

15.
We have used 19F nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study the interaction of the inhibitory region of troponin (TnI) with apo- and calcium(II)-saturated turkey skeletal troponin C (TnC), using the synthetic TnI analogue N alpha-acetyl[19FPhe106]TnI(104-115)amide. Dissociation constants of Kd = (3.7 +/- 3.1) x 10(-5) M for the apo interaction and Kd = (4.8 +/- 1.8) x 10(-5) M for the calcium(II)-saturated interaction were obtained using a 1:1 binding model of peptide to protein. The 19F NMR chemical shifts for the F-phenylalanine of the bound peptide are different from the apo- and calcium-saturated protein, indicating a different environment for the bound peptide. The possibility of 2:1 binding of the peptide to Ca(II)-saturated TnC was tested by calculating the fit of the experimental titration data to a series of theoretical binding curves in which the dissociation constants for the two hypothetical binding sites were varied. We obtained the best fit for 0.056 mM less than or equal to Kd1 less than or equal to 0.071 mM and 0.5 mM less than or equal to Kd2 less than or equal to 2.0 mM. These results allow the possibility of a second peptide binding site on calcium(II)-saturated TnC with an affinity 10- to 20-fold weaker than that of the first site.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of metal ion binding on the optical spectroscopic properties and temperature stability of two single tryptophan mutants of chicken skeletal TnC, F78W and F154W, have been examined. The absence of tyrosine and other tryptophan residues allowed the unambiguous assignment of the spectral signal from the introduced Trp residue. Changes in the molar ellipticity values in the far-UV CD spectra of the mutant proteins on metal ion binding were similar to those of wild-type TnC suggesting that the introduction of the Trp residue had no effect on the total secondary structure content. The fluorescence and near-UV absorbance data reveal that, in the apo state, Trp-78 is buried while Trp-154 is exposed to solvent. Additionally, the highly resolved (1)L(b) band of Trp-78 seen in the near-UV absorbance and CD spectra of the apo state of F78W suggest that this residue is likely in a rigid molecular environment. In the calcium-saturated state, Trp-154 becomes buried while the solvent accessibility of Trp-78 increases. The fluorescence emission and near-UV CD of Trp-78 in the N-terminal domain were sensitive to calcium binding at the C-terminal domain sites. Measurements of the temperature stability reveal that events occurring in the N-terminal domain affect the stability of the C-terminal domain and vice versa. This, coupled with the titration data, strongly suggests that there are interactions between the N- and C-terminal domains of TnC.  相似文献   

17.
The regulatory complex of vertebrate skeletal muscle integrates information about cross-bridge binding, divalent cations and other intracellular ionic conditions to control activation of muscle contraction. Relatively little is known about the role of the troponin C (TnC) C-domain in the absence of Ca2+. Here, we use a standardized condition for measuring isometric tension in rabbit psoas skinned fibers to track TnC attachment and detachment in the absence of Ca2+ under different conditions of ionic strength, pH and MgATP. In the presence of MgATP and Mg2+, TnC detaches more readily and has a 1.5- to 2-fold lower affinity for the intact thin filament at pH 8 and 250 mM K+ than at pH 6 or in 30 mM K+; changes in affinity are fully reversible. The response to ionic strength is lost when Mg2+ and MgATP are absent, whereas the response to pH persists, suggesting that weaker electrostatic TnC-TnI-TnT interactions can be overridden by strongly bound cross-bridges. In solution, titration of a fluorescent C-domain mutant (F154W TnC) with Mg2+ reveals no significant changes in Mg2+ affinity with pH or ionic strength, suggesting that these parameters influence TnC binding by acting directly on electrostatic forces between TnC and TnI rather than by changing Mg2+ binding to C-domain sites III and IV.  相似文献   

18.
We have produced a recombinant transducin alpha subunit (rT alpha) in sf9 cells, using a baculovirus system. Deletion of the myristoylation site near the N-terminal increased the solubility and allowed the purification of rT alpha. When reconstituted with excess T beta gamma on retinal membrane, rT alpha displayed functional characteristics of wild-type T alpha vis à vis its coupled receptor, rhodopsin and its effector, cGMP phosphodiesterase (PDE). We further mutated a tryptophan, W207, which is conserved in all G proteins and is suspected to elicit the fluorescence change correlated to their activation upon GDP/GTP exchange or aluminofluoride (AlFx) binding. [W207F]T alpha mutant displayed high affinity receptor binding and underwent a conformational switch upon receptor-catalysed GTP gamma S binding or upon AlFx binding, but this did not elicit any fluorescence change. Thus W207 is the only fluorescence sensor of the switch. Upon the switch the mutant remained unable to activate the PDE. To characterize better its effector-activating interaction we measured the affinity of [W207F]T alpha GDP-AlFx for PDE gamma, the effector subunit that binds most tightly to T alpha. [W207F]T alpha still bound in an activation-dependent way to PDE gamma, but with a 100-fold lower affinity than rT alpha. This suggests that W207 contributes to the G protein effector binding.  相似文献   

19.
Pearson DS  Swartz DR  Geeves MA 《Biochemistry》2008,47(46):12146-12158
We have used rapid pressure jump and stopped-flow fluorometry to investigate calcium and magnesium binding to F29W chicken skeletal troponin C. Increased pressure perturbed calcium binding to the N-terminal sites in the presence and absence of magnesium and provided an estimate for the volume change upon calcium binding (-12 mL/mol). We observed a biphasic response to a pressure change which was characterized by fast and slow reciprocal relaxation times of the order 1000/s and 100/s. Between pCa 8-5.4 and at troponin C concentrations of 8-28 muM, the slow relaxation times were invariant, indicating that a protein isomerization was rate-limiting. The fast event was only detected over a very narrow pCa range (5.6-5.4). We have devised a model based on a Monod-Wyman-Changeux cooperative mechanism with volume changes of -9 and +6 mL/mol for the calcium binding to the regulatory sites and closed to open protein isomerization steps, respectively. In the absence of magnesium, we discovered that calcium binding to the C-terminal sites could be detected, despite their position distal to the calcium-sensitive tryptophan, with a volume change of +25 mL/mol. We used this novel observation to measure competitive magnesium binding to the C-terminal sites and deduced an affinity in the range 200-300 muM (and a volume change of +35 mL/mol). This affinity is an order of magnitude tighter than equilibrium fluorescence data suggest based on a model of direct competitive binding. Magnesium thus indirectly modulates binding to the N-terminal sites, which may act as a fine-tuning mechanism in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
The C-domain of troponin C, the Ca(2+)-binding subunit of the troponin complex, has two high-affinity sites for Ca(2+) that also bind Mg(2+) (Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites), whereas the N-domain has two low-affinity sites for Ca(2+). Two more sites that bind Mg(2+) with very low affinity (K(a)<10(3)M(-1)) have been detected by several laboratories but have not been localized or studied in any detail. Here we investigated the effects of Ca(2+) and Mg(2+) binding to isolated C-domain, focusing primarily on low-affinity sites. Since TnC has no Trp residues, we utilized a mutant with Phe 154 replaced by Trp (F154W/C-domain). As expected from previous reports, the changes in Trp fluorescence revealed different conformations induced by the addition of Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) (Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites). Exposure of hydrophobic surfaces of F154W/C-domain was monitored using the fluorescence intensity of bis-anilino naphthalene sulfonic acid. Unlike the changes reported by Trp, the increments in bis-ANS fluorescence were much greater (4.2-fold) when Ca(2+)+Mg(2+) were both present or when Ca(2+) was present at high concentration. Bis-ANS fluorescence increased as a function of [Ca(2+)] in two well-defined steps: one at low [Ca(2+)], consistent with the Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites (K(a) approximately 1.5 x 10(6)M(-1)), and one of much lower affinity (K(a) approximately 52.3M(-1)). Controls were performed to rule out artifacts due to aggregation, high ionic strength and formation of the bis-ANS-TnC complex itself. With a low concentration of Ca(2+) (0.6mM) to occupy the Ca(2+)/Mg(2+) sites, a large increase in bis-ANS binding also occurred as Mg(2+) occupied a class of low-affinity sites (K(a) approximately 59 M(-1)). In skinned fibers, a high concentration of Mg(2+) (10-44 mM) caused TnC to dissociate from the thin filament. These data provide new evidence for a class of weak binding sites for divalent cations. They are located in the C-domain, lead to exposure of a large hydrophobic surface, and destabilize the binding of TnC to the regulatory complex even when sites III and IV are occupied.  相似文献   

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