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1.
Two-dimensional x-ray diffraction was used to investigate structural features of cross-bridges that generate force in isometrically contracting skeletal muscle. Diffraction patterns were recorded from arrays of single, chemically skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers during isometric force generation, under relaxation, and in rigor. In isometric contraction, a rather prominent intensification of the actin layer lines at 5.9 and 5.1 nm and of the first actin layer line at 37 nm was found compared with those under relaxing conditions. Surprisingly, during isometric contraction, the intensity profile of the 5.9-nm actin layer line was shifted toward the meridian, but the resulting intensity profile was different from that observed in rigor. We particularly addressed the question whether the differences seen between rigor and active contraction might be due to a rigor-like configuration of both myosin heads in the absence of nucleotide (rigor), whereas during active contraction only one head of each myosin molecule is in a rigor-like configuration and the second head is weakly bound. To investigate this question, we created different mixtures of weak binding myosin heads and rigor-like actomyosin complexes by titrating MgATPgammaS at saturating [Ca2+] into arrays of single muscle fibers. The resulting diffraction patterns were different in several respects from patterns recorded under isometric contraction, particularly in the intensity distribution along the 5.9-nm actin layer line. This result indicates that cross-bridges present during isometric force generation are not simply a mixture of weakly bound and single-headed rigor-like complexes but are rather distinctly different from the rigor-like cross-bridge. Experiments with myosin-S1 and truncated S1 (motor domain) support the idea that for a force generating cross-bridge, disorder due to elastic distortion might involve a larger part of the myosin head than for a nucleotide free, rigor cross-bridge.  相似文献   

2.
Yagi N  Iwamoto H  Inoue K 《Biophysical journal》2006,91(11):4110-4120
Structural changes in the myosin cross-bridges were studied by small-angle x-ray diffraction at a time resolution of 0.53 ms. A frog sartorius muscle, which was electrically stimulated to induce isometric contraction, was released by approximately 1% in 1 ms, and then its length was decreased to allow steady shortening with tension of approximately 30% of the isometric level. Intensity of all reflections reached a constant level in 5-8 ms. Intensity of the 7.2-nm meridional reflection and the (1,0) sampling spot of the 14.5-nm layer line increased after the initial release but returned to the isometric level during steady shortening. The 21.5-nm meridional reflection showed fast and slow components of intensity increase. The intensity of the 10.3-nm layer line, which arises from myosin heads attached to actin, decreased to a steady level in 2 ms, whereas other reflections took longer, 5-20 ms. The results show that myosin heads adapt quickly to an altered level of tension, and that there is a distinct structural state just after a quick release.  相似文献   

3.
In the X-ray diffraction pattern from oriented gels of actin-containing filaments sampling of layer lines indicating the development of a well-ordered pseudo-hexagonal lattice within the gels at interfilament spacings as large as 13 nm is observed. This value exceeds by 3 nm the largest estimate of an external diameter of pure f-actin. The development of layer line sampling is always accompanied by: (i) the appearance of strong forbidden meridional reflections on the 5.9- and 5.1-nm layer lines; (ii) a drastic intensification of the first (expected) 2.75-nm meridional reflection by a factor of about 4; (iii) the appearance of streaks, connecting near-meridional reflections on the 5.9-, 5.1-, and 37-nm layer lines; and (iv) a slight decrease in the number of subunits per turn of the basic f-actin helix. All these features strongly indicate that f-actin filaments are supercoiled and make regular local contacts between themselves, which may lead to periodic distortions of the mobile external domain in the actin subunits.  相似文献   

4.
Calculation of the size of the power stroke of the myosin motor in contracting muscle requires knowledge of the compliance of the myofilaments. Current estimates of actin compliance vary significantly introducing uncertainty in the mechanical parameters of the motor. Using x-ray diffraction on small bundles of permeabilized fibers from rabbit muscle we show that strong binding of myosin heads changes directly the actin helix. The spacing of the 2.73-nm meridional x-ray reflection increased by 0.22% when relaxed fibers were put into low-tension rigor (<10 kN/m(2)) demonstrating that strongly bound myosin heads elongate the actin filaments even in the absence of external tension. The pitch of the 5.9-nm actin layer line increased by approximately 0.62% and that of the 5.1-nm layer line decreased by approximately 0.26%, suggesting that the elongation is accompanied by a decrease in its helical angle (approximately 166 degrees) by approximately 0.8 degrees. This effect explains the difference between actin compliance revealed from mechanical experiments with single fibers and from x-ray diffraction on whole muscles. Our measurement of actin compliance obtained by applying tension to fibers in rigor is consistent with the results of mechanical measurements.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of external force on the X-ray pattern from frog muscles in rigor was studied by a time-resolved diffraction technique. When sinusoidal length changes (1.5–3% of the muscle length, 5Hz) were applied to the muscle, the 14.3 nm intensity decreased during the releasing phase and increased during the stretching phase. The intensity ratio of the equatorial 1,0 and 1,1 reflections did not change, nor were there any appreciable intensity changes in the 5.9 nm and 5.1 nm reflections during the length change. Experiments were also done with the relaxed muscles and no change was seen in any reflection, indicating that the rigor linkages are needed to produce the 14.3 nm intensity change. Thus the distinct effect of the length change was detected only on the 14.3 nm reflection. These results suggest no large conformational changes are induced in both the distal part of the myosin head attached to actin and the actin filament during the oscillation. It is therefore most probable that the proximal portion of myosin heads including S-2 contributes to the intensity change in response to the length change (see, also ref.21). When the muscle was stretched beyond the filament overlap, the 14.3 nm intensity change was suppressed to less than 50% of that of the slack length. It was also found that the tension change delayed the intensity change during the length oscillation. However, this delay of the tension change as observed in the muscle at the slack length was lacking in the overstretched muscle, indicating that the 14.3 nm intensity change may arise partly from a portion other than the crossbridges.  相似文献   

6.
To clarify the extensibility of thin actin and thick myosin filaments in muscle, we examined the spacings of actin and myosin filament-based reflections in x-ray diffraction patterns at high resolution during isometric contraction of frog skeletal muscles and steady lengthening of the active muscles using synchrotron radiation as an intense x-ray source and a storage phosphor plate as a high sensitivity, high resolution area detector. Spacing of the actin meridional reflection at approximately 1/2.7 nm-1, which corresponds to the axial rise per actin subunit in the thin filament, increased about 0.25% during isometric contraction of muscles at full overlap length of thick and thin filaments. The changes in muscles stretched to approximately half overlap of the filaments, when they were scaled linearly up to the full isometric tension, gave an increase of approximately 0.3%. Conversely, the spacing decreased by approximately 0.1% upon activation of muscles at nonoverlap length. Slow stretching of a contracting muscle increased tension and increased this spacing over the isometric contraction value. Scaled up to a 100% tension increase, this corresponds to a approximately 0.26% additional change, consistent with that of the initial isometric contraction. Taken together, the extensibility of the actin filament amounts to 3-4 nm of elongation when a muscle switches from relaxation to maximum isometric contraction. Axial spacings of the layer-line reflections at approximately 1/5.1 nm-1 and approximately 1/5.9 nm-1 corresponding to the pitches of the right- and left-handed genetic helices of the actin filament, showed similar changes to that of the meridional reflection during isometric contraction of muscles at full overlap. The spacing changes of these reflections, which also depend on the mechanical load on the muscle, indicate that elongation is accompanied by slight changes of the actin helical structure possibly because of the axial force exerted by the actomyosin cross-bridges. Additional small spacing changes of the myosin meridional reflections during length changes applied to contracting muscles represented an increase of approximately 0.26% (scaled up to a 100% tension increase) in the myosin periodicity, suggesting that such spacing changes correspond to a tension-related extension of the myosin filaments. Elongation of the myosin filament backbone amounts to approximately 2.1 nm per half sarcomere. The results indicate that a large part (approximately 70%) of the sarcomere compliance of an active muscle is caused by the extensibility of the actin and myosin filaments; 42% of the compliance resides in the actin filaments, and 27% of it is in the myosin filaments.  相似文献   

7.
X-ray diffraction patterns from mammalian heart muscle   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
We have obtained light and X-ray diffraction patterns from trabecular and papillary muscles of various mammalian hearts in the living resting state and in rigor. Equatorial X-ray diffraction patterns from living muscles show the 1,0 and 1,1 reflections from a hexagonal lattice of filaments. The lattice spacing varies with sarcomere length over the observable range (2·0 to 2·5 μm) in such a manner that the lattice volume remains constant. In the living resting state the 1,0 reflection is stronger than the 1,1 reflection, whereas in rigor the 1,1 reflection is almost as strong as the 1,0 reflection. These intensity changes are similar to those found in vertebrate skeletal muscle, suggesting that the mechanism of cross-bridge attachment to actin is similar in both muscles.Two types of meridional X-ray diffraction pattern were observed in muscles in different conditions. One type, obtained from dead or glycerol-extracted muscles or from muscles treated with iodoacetate, showed a strong actin-related pattern but only a weak pattern associated with myosin. This type of pattern was similar to that from vertebrate skeletal muscle in rigor. The other type, obtained from living, resting muscle, showed a weaker actin pattern but a stronger myosin pattern. The myosin pattern included layer-line reflections associated with projections from the thick filaments. This second type of pattern was similar to that from resting vertebrate skeletal muscle, but the layer lines were weaker. The weakness of the myosin layer lines may indicate that part of the high resting tension found in heart muscle arises from a small amount of actin-myosin interaction in the resting state. Such interaction could provide a mechanism for varying the diastolic length of heart muscle and thereby the diastolic volume of the heart.  相似文献   

8.
The strongest myosin-related features in the low-angle axial x-ray diffraction pattern of resting frog sartorius muscle are the meridional reflections corresponding to axial spacings of 21.4 and 14.3 nm, and the first layer line, at a spacing 42.9 nm. During tetanus the intensities of the first layer line and the 21.4-nm meridional decrease by 62 and 80% respectively, but, when the muscle is fresh, the 14.3-nm meridional intensity rises by 13%, although it shows a decrease when the muscle is fatigued. The large change in the intensity of the 21.4-nm meridional reflection suggests that the projected myosin cross-bridge density onto the thick filament axis changes during contraction. The model proposed by Bennett (Ph.D. Thesis, University of London, 1977) in which successive cross-bridge levels are at 0,3/8, and 5/8 of the 42.9-nm axial repeat in the resting muscle, passing to 0, 1/3, and 2/3 in the contracting state, can explain why the 21.4-nm reflection decreases in intensity while the 14.3-nm increases when the muscle is activated. The model predicts a rather larger increase of the 14.3-nm reflection intensity during contraction than that observed, but the discrepancy may be removed if a small change of shape or tilt of the cross-bridges relative to the thick filament axis is introduced. The decrease of the intensity of the first layer line indicates that the cross-bridges become disordered in the plane perpendicular to the filament axis.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of the applied stretch and MgADP binding on the structure of the actomyosin cross-bridges in rabbit and/or frog skeletal muscle fibers in the rigor state have been investigated with improved resolution by x-ray diffraction using synchrotron radiation. The results showed a remarkable structural similarity between cross-bridge states induced by stretch and MgADP binding. The intensities of the 14.4- and 7.2-nm meridional reflections increased by approximately 23 and 47%, respectively, when 1 mM MgADP was added to the rigor rabbit muscle fibers in the presence of ATP-depletion backup system and an inhibitor for muscle adenylate kinase or by approximately 33 and 17%, respectively, when rigor frog muscle was stretched by approximately 4.5% of the initial muscle length. In addition, both MgADP binding and stretch induced a small but genuine intensity decrease in the region close to the meridian of the 5.9-nm layer line while retaining the intensity profile of its outer portion. No appreciable influence was observed in the intensities of the higher order meridional reflections of the 14.4-nm repeat and the other actin-based reflections as well as the equatorial reflections, indicating a lack of detachment of cross-bridges in both cases. The changes in the axial spacings of the actin-based and the 14.4-nm-based reflections were observed and associated with the tension change. These results indicate that stretch and ADP binding mediate similar structural changes, being in the correct direction to those expected for that the conformational changes are induced in the outer portion distant from the catalytic domain of attached cross-bridges. Modeling of conformational changes of the attached myosin head suggested a small but significant movement (about 10-20 degrees) in the light chain-binding domain of the head toward the M-line of the sarcomere. Both chemical (ADP binding) and mechanical (stretch) intervensions can reverse the contractile cycle by causing a backward movement of this domain of attached myosin heads in the rigor state.  相似文献   

10.
Yagi N 《Biophysical journal》2007,92(1):162-171
A time-resolved x-ray diffraction study at a time resolution of 0.53 ms was made to investigate the structural origin of latency relaxation (LR) in frog skeletal muscle. Intensity and spacing measurements were made on meridional reflections from the Ca-binding protein troponin and the thick filament and on layer lines from the thin filament. At 16 degrees C, the intensity and spacing of all reflections started to change at 4 ms, simultaneously with the LR. At 0 degrees C, the intensity of the troponin reflection and the layer lines from the thin filament and the spacing of the 14.3-nm myosin meridional reflection, but not the spacing of other myosin meridional reflections, began to change at approximately 15 ms, when the LR also started. Intensity of myosin-based reflections started to change later. When the muscle was stretched to non-overlap length, the intensity and spacing changes of the myosin reflections disappeared. The simultaneous spacing change of the 14.3-nm myosin meridional reflection with the LR suggests that detachment of myosin heads that are bound to actin in the resting muscle is the cause of the LR.  相似文献   

11.
Using data from fast time-resolved x-ray diffraction experiments on the synchrotrons at Daresbury and (Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron [DESY]), it is shown that during contraction of fish muscle there are at least two distinct configurations of myosin cross-bridges on actin, that they appear to have different tension producing properties and that they probably differ in the axial tilt of the cross-bridges on actin. Evidence is presented for newly observed myosin-based layer lines in patterns from active fish muscle, together with intensity changes of the actin layer lines. On the equator, the 110 reflection changes much faster (time for 50% change t1/2 = 21 +/- 4 ms after activation) than the 100 reflection (t1/2 = 35 +/- 8 ms) and tension (t1/2 = 41 +/- 3 ms) during the rising phase of tetanic contractions. These and higher order reflections have been used to show the time course of mass attachment at actin during this rising phase. Mass arrival (t1/2 = 25 ms) precedes tension by approximately 15 ms. Analysis has been carried out to evaluate the effects of changes in sarcomere length during the tetanus. It is shown that any such effects are very small. Difference "equatorial" electron density maps between active muscle at a time when mass arrival at actin is just complete, but the tension is still rising, and at a later time well into the tension plateau, show that the structural difference between the lower and higher force states corresponds to mass movement consistent with axial swinging of heads from a nonstereospecific actin attached state (low force) to a more stereospecific (high force) state.  相似文献   

12.
We report the first time-resolved study of the two-dimensional x-ray diffraction pattern during active contraction in insect flight muscle (IFM). Activation of demembranated Lethocerus IFM was triggered by 1.5-2.5% step stretches (risetime 10 ms; held for 1.5 s) giving delayed active tension that peaked at 100-200 ms. Bundles of 8-12 fibers were stretch-activated on SRS synchrotron x-ray beamline 16.1, and time-resolved changes in diffraction were monitored with a SRS 2-D multiwire detector. As active tension rose, the 14.5- and 7.2-nm meridionals fell, the first row line dropped at the 38.7 nm layer line while gaining a new peak at 19.3 nm, and three outer peaks on the 38.7-nm layer line rose. The first row line changes suggest restricted binding of active myosin heads to the helically preferred region in each actin target zone, where, in rigor, two-headed lead bridges bind, midway between troponin bulges that repeat every 38.7 nm. Halving this troponin repeat by binding of single active heads explains the intensity rise at 19.3 nm being coupled to a loss at 38.7 nm. The meridional changes signal movement of at least 30% of all myosin heads away from their axially ordered positions on the myosin helix. The 38.7- and 19.3-nm layer line changes signal stereoselective attachment of 7-23% of the myosin heads to the actin helix, although with too little ordering at 6-nm resolution to affect the 5.9-nm actin layer line. We conclude that stretch-activated tension of IFM is produced by cross-bridges that bind to rigor's lead-bridge target zones, comprising < or = 1/3 of the 75-80% that attach in rigor.  相似文献   

13.
Non-specific termination of simian virus 40 DNA replication.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Axial X-ray diffraction patterns have been studied from relaxed, contracted and rigor vertebrate striated muscles at different sarcomere lengths to determine which features of the patterns depend on the interaction of actin and myosin. The intensity of the myosin layer lines in a live, relaxed muscle is sometimes less in a stretched muscle than in the muscle at rest-length; the intensity depends not only on the sarcomere length but on the time that has elapsed since dissection of the muscle. The movement of cross-bridges giving rise to these intensity changes are not caused solely by the withdrawal of actin from the A-band.When a muscle contracts or passes into rigor many changes occur that are independent of the sarcomere length: the myosin layer lines decrease in intensity to about 30% of their initial value when the muscle contracts, and disappear completely when the muscle passes into rigor. Both in contracting and rigor muscles at all sarcomere lengths the spacings of the meridional reflections at 143 Å and 72 Å are 1% greater than from a live relaxed muscle at rest-length. It is deduced that the initial movement of cross-bridges from their positions in resting muscle does not depend on the interaction of each cross-bridge with actin, but on a conformational change in the backbone of the myosin filament: occurring as a result of activation. The possibility is discussed that the conformational change occurs because the myosin filament, like the actin filament, has an activation control mechanism. Finally, all the X-ray diffraction patterns are interpreted on a model in which the myosin filament can exist in one of two possible states: a relaxed state which gives a diffraction pattern with strong myosin layer lines and an axial spacing of 143.4 Å, and an activated state which gives no layer lines but a meridional spacing of 144.8 Å.  相似文献   

14.
Structural changes induced by Joule temperature jumps (T-jumps) in frog muscle fibers were monitored using time-resolved x-ray diffraction. Experiments made use of single, permeabilized fibers that were fully activated after slight cross-linking with 1-ethyl-3-[3-dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide to preserve their structural order. After T-jumps from 5-6 to approximately 17 degrees C and then on to approximately 30 degrees C, tension increased by a factor of 1.51 and 1.84, respectively, whereas fiber stiffness did not change with temperature. The tension rise was accompanied by a decrease in the intensity of the (1, 0) equatorial x-ray reflection by 15 and 26% (at approximately 17 and approximately 30 degrees C) and by an increase in the intensity of the M3 myosin reflection by 20% and 41%, respectively. The intensity of the (1,1) equatorial reflection increased slightly. The peak of the intensity on the 6th actin layer line shifted toward the meridian with temperature. The intensity of the 1st actin layer line increased from 12% (of its rigor value) at 5-6 degrees C to 36% at approximately 30 degrees C, so that the fraction of the cross-bridges labeling the actin helix estimated from this intensity increased proportionally to tension from approximately 35% at 5-6 degrees C to approximately 60% at approximately 30 degrees C. This suggests that force is generated during a transition of nonstereo-specifically attached myosin cross-bridges to a stereo-specific binding state.  相似文献   

15.
In order to clarify the structural changes related to the regulation mechanism in skeletal muscle contraction, the intensity changes of thin filament-based reflections were investigated by X-ray fiber diffraction. The time course and extent of intensity changes of the first to third order troponin (TN)-associated meridional reflections with a basic repeat of 38.4 nm were different for each of these reflections. The intensity of the first and second thin filament layer lines changed in a reciprocal manner both during initial activation and during the force generation process. The axial spacings of the TN-meridional reflections decreased by ∼0.1% upon activation relative to the relaxing state and increased by ∼0.24% in the force generation state, in line with that of the 2.7-nm reflection. Ca2+-binding to TN triggered the shortening and a change in the helical symmetry of the thin filaments. Modeling of the structural changes using the intensities of the thin filament-based reflections suggested that the conformation of the globular core domain of TN altered upon activation, undergoing additional conformational changes at the tension plateau. The tail domain of TN moved together with tropomyosin during contraction. The results indicate that the structural changes of regulatory proteins bound to the actin filaments occur in two steps, the first in response to the Ca2+-binding and the second induced by actomyosin interaction.  相似文献   

16.
The duty ratio, or the part of the working cycle in which a myosin molecule is strongly attached to actin, determines motor processivity and is required to evaluate the force generated by each molecule. In muscle, it is equal to the fraction of myosin heads that are strongly, or stereospecifically, bound to the thin filaments. Estimates of this fraction during isometric contraction based on stiffness measurements or the intensities of the equatorial or meridional x-ray reflections vary significantly. Here, we determined this value using the intensity of the first actin layer line, A1, in the low-angle x-ray diffraction patterns of permeable fibers from rabbit skeletal muscle. We calibrated the A1 intensity by considering that the intensity in the relaxed and rigor states corresponds to 0% and 100% of myosin heads bound to actin, respectively. The fibers maximally activated with Ca2+ at 4°C were heated to 31–34°C with a Joule temperature jump (T-jump). Rigor and relaxed-state measurements were obtained on the same fibers. The intensity of the inner part of A1 during isometric contraction compared with that in rigor corresponds to 41–43% stereospecifically bound myosin heads at near-physiological temperature, or an average force produced by a head of ∼6.3 pN.  相似文献   

17.
This report provides a preliminary sketch of the results obtained in a two-dimensional time resolved X-ray diffraction study of “live” frog sartorius muscles undergoing isometric tetani. These results demonstrate the recently developed capability to record time resolved (10 msec time resolution), two-dimensional X-ray diffraction diagrams throughout the cycle of contraction.The correlation between the time courses of the diffraction features in the whole of the diffraction diagram establishes a sequence of structural events, which suggest that during the transition from rest to the plateau of tension and the subsequent recovery, the following sequence of events takes place:
  • 1.a) Following the activation phase, which is best monitored by the increase of intensity on the second actin layer line at 18.0 nm spacing (5), there is the onset of three dimensional disorder due to the filaments losing their axial alignment and the myosin heads rotating azimuthally and moving radially outwards. A set of low-angle layer lines, following the actin based spacings seen in rigor (i.e., at spacings of ca. 36.5–37.5, 24.0 and 18.0 nm) become visible and those at ca. 24.0 and 18.0 nm appear to increase in intensity during this phase with a time course that cannot be determined accurately because of the proximity of the neighbouring first, second and third myosin layer lines and the weakness of these diffraction features. Whether the first of these layer lines increases or not is difficult to ascertain. Moreover, proper account of the loss in crystallinity during the development of tension must be made before the comparisons in intensity between the rest and peak of tension states have any significance. Nevertheless, these features together with the behaviour of the equatorial reflections and the meridional region of the third myosin layer line indicate that a sizeable fraction of the crossbridges may become axially disposed with an actin based periodicity. The formation of this complex does not immediately result in the generation of tension. The labelling of the thin filaments is also reflected in the main actin layer lines at 5.9 and 5.1 nm.
  • 2.b) The tension generating phase is monitored by the intensity changes in the meridional region of the third myosin layer line, which are best explained by a change in the orientation/conformation of the tension bearing crossbridges, (which probably adopt a more perpendicular orientation to the filament axis).
  • 3.c) At the end of stimulation, the crossbridges return to an axial spacing and axial orientation (although not yet azimuthal) similar to the one at rest. This is followed by a very slow return to the azimuthal equilibrium position typical of the rest pattern.
  相似文献   

18.
The structure of actomyosin complex while hydrolyzing ATP was investigated by recording X-ray diffraction patterns from rabbit skeletal muscle fibers, in which exogenously introduced rabbit skeletal subfragment-1 (S1) was covalently cross-linked to the endogenous actin filaments in rigor by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (EDC). Approximately two-thirds of the introduced S1 was cross-linked. The cross-linking procedure did not affect the profile of the S1-induced enhancement of the actin-based layer line reflections in rigor, indicating that the acto-S1 interactions remained highly stereospecific. In the presence of ATP, the MgATPase of the S1 was highly activated regardless of calcium levels, presumably because the availability of the stereospecific binding sites for both proteins was maximized by the cross-linking. However, the diffraction pattern in the presence of ATP was striking in that the intensity profile of the strong 1/5.9 nm(-1) layer lines was indistinguishable from that from bare actin filaments, despite the fact that the majority of the S1 was still associated with actin. The change of the intensity profiles upon addition of ATP was completely reversible. Model calculations showed that this result can be explained if the S1 is not only swinging around its pivoting point, but the pivoting point itself is also moving on the actin surface in a range of a few nanometers. The results suggest that the stereospecific binding sites, which have been considered important for actomyosin cycling, are paradoxically left unoccupied for most of the time in this highly activated actomyosin complex.  相似文献   

19.
Changes in the x-ray diffraction pattern from a frog skeletal muscle were recorded after a quick release or stretch, which was completed within one millisecond, at a time resolution of 0.53 ms using the high-flux beamline at the SPring-8 third-generation synchrotron radiation facility. Reversibility of the effects of the length changes was checked by quickly restoring the muscle length. Intensities of seven reflections were measured. A large, instantaneous intensity drop of a layer line at an axial spacing of 1/10.3 nm(-1) after a quick release and stretch, and its partial recovery by reversal of the length change, indicate a conformational change of myosin heads that are attached to actin. Intensity changes on the 14.5-nm myosin layer line suggest that the attached heads alter their radial mass distribution upon filament sliding. Intensity changes of the myosin reflections at 1/21.5 and 1/7.2 nm(-1) are not readily explained by a simple axial swing of cross-bridges. Intensity changes of the actin-based layer lines at 1/36 and 1/5.9 nm(-1) are not explained by it either, suggesting a structural change in actin molecules.  相似文献   

20.
Mechanical and two-dimensional (2D) x-ray diffraction studies suggest that during isometric steady-state contraction, strongly bound cross-bridges mostly occupy early states in the power stroke, whereas rigor or rigor-like cross-bridges could not be detected. However, it remained unclear whether cross-bridges accumulate, at least transiently, in rigor or rigor-like states in response to rapid-length releases. We addressed this question using time-resolved recording of 2D x-ray diffraction patterns of permeabilized fibers from rabbit psoas muscles during isometric contraction and when small, ramp-shaped length-releases were applied to these fibers. This maneuver allows a transient accumulation of cross-bridges in states near the end of their power stroke. By lowering the temperature to 5°C, force transients were slowed sufficiently to record diffraction patterns in several 2-4-ms time frames before and during such releases, using the RAPID detector (Refined ADC Per Input Detector) at beam line ID02 of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (Grenoble, France). The same sequence of frames was recorded in relaxation and rigor. Comparisons of 2D patterns recorded during isometric contraction, with patterns recorded at different [MgATPγS] and at 1°C, showed that changes in intensity profiles along the first and sixth actin layer lines (ALL1 and ALL6, respectively) allowed for discernment of the formation of rigor or rigor-like cross-bridges. During ramp-shaped releases of activated fibers, intensity profiles along ALL1 and ALL6 did not reveal evidence for the accumulation of rigor-like cross-bridges. Instead, changes in the ALL6-profile suggest that during ramp-shaped releases, cross-bridges transiently accumulate in a structural state that, to our knowledge, was not previously seen, but that could well be a strongly bound state with the light-chain binding domain in a conformation between a near prepower-stroke (isometric) orientation and the orientation in rigor.  相似文献   

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