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1.
To see whether the SII portion of the cross-bridge in rigor fibers is longitudinally compliant, we chemically cross-linked with dimethyl suberimidate the entire rod portion (including the SII portion) of myosin onto the surface of thick filaments in glycerinated rabbit psoas fibers, and studied the effect of the SII fixation on the stiffness of the rigor fibers. The cross-linking of fiber segments with full filament overlap increased the rigor stiffness by approximately 25%. Almost the same absolute amount of the stiffness increase was also observed in rigor fibers with half- or no filament overlap after the cross-linking, and a similar but somewhat larger increment of stiffness was observed in fiber segments cross-linked in relaxing solution. These results indicate that the stiffness increase is not produced by the fixation of the SII portion onto the thick filament surface, but is caused instead by the cross-linking of some parallel elastic elements in muscle, and therefore indicate that the SII portion of the cross-bridge is hardly longitudinally compliant in rigor fibers.  相似文献   

2.
Two rigor states in skinned crayfish single muscle fibers   总被引:8,自引:3,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
We studied the tension and stiffness of crayfish skinned single muscle fibers during and after the induction of rigor by removal of MgATP (substrate). We found that the rigor state is not unique but depends on the condition of the muscle before rigor. Fibers induced into rigor with a minimum of activation (low rigor) develop a small tension and moderate stiffness, while those entering rigor during maximum activation (high rigor) maintain near peak tension (80%) and develop a high stiffness. These rigor states are insensitive to Ca addition or deletion but they are partially interconvertible by length change. Stiffness changes when the rigor muscle length is varied, a condition in which the number of attached cross-rigor muscle length is varied, a condition in which the number of attached cross-bridges cannot change, and high-rigor muscle becomes less stiff than low-rigor muscle when the former is brought to the same tension by length release. The sensitivity of low, high, or length-released high-rigor muscles to trace substrate concentration (less than muM) differs, and rigor at lower strain is more suscepitible to substrate.  相似文献   

3.
Inhibition and relaxation of sea urchin sperm flagella by vanadate   总被引:10,自引:10,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Direct measurements of the stiffness (elastic bending resistance) of demembranated sera urchin sperm flagella were made in the presence of MgATP2- and vanadate. Under these conditions, the flagellum is in a relaxed state, with a stiffness of approximately 0.9 x 10(-21) N m2, which is approximately 5% of the stiffness obtained in the rigor state in the absence of MgATP2-. MgADP- dose not substitute for MgATP2- in producing relaxed state. A progressive inhibition of movement is observed after addition of MgATP2- to flagella preincubated with vanadate, in which new bend generation, propagation, and relaxation by straightening are distinguished, depending on the ratio of MgATP2- and vanadate. At appropriate concentrations of vanadate, increase of the velocity of bend propagation is observed at a very low concentration of MgATP2- that is not enough to induce spontaneous beating. Vanadate enhances competitive inhibition of beat frequency by MgADP- but not by ADP3-, ATP4-, or Pi. These observations, and the uncompetitive inhibition of beat frequency by vanadate, indicate that vanadate can only bind to dynein-nucleotide complexes induced by MgATP2- and MgADP-. The state accessible by MgATP2- binding must be a state in which the cross-bridges are detached and the flagellum is relaxed. The state accessible by MgADP- binding must be a cross-bridged state. Bound vanadate prevents the transition between these two states. Inhibition and relaxation by banadate in the presence of MgATP2- results from the specific affinity of vanadate for a state in which nucleotide is bound, rather than a specific affinity for the deteched state.  相似文献   

4.
Repulsive pressure in the A-band filament lattice of relaxed frog skeletal muscle has been measured as a function of interfilament spacing using an osmotic shrinking technique. Much improved chemical skinning was obtained when the muscles were equilibrated in the presence of EGTA before skinning. The lattice shrank with increasing external osmotic pressure. At any specific pressure, the lattice spacing in relaxed muscle was smaller than that of muscle in rigor, except at low pressures where the reverse was found. The lattice spacing was the same in the two states at a spacing close to that found in vivo. The data were consistent with an electrostatic repulsion over most of the pressure range. For relaxed muscle, the data lay close to electrostatic pressure curves for a thick filament charge diameter of approximately 26 nm, suggesting that charges stabilizing the lattice are situated about midway along the thick filament projections (HMM-S1). At low pressures, observed spacings were larger than calculated, consistent with the idea that thick filament projections move away from the filament backbone. Under all conditions studied, relaxed and rigor, at short and very long sarcomere lengths, the filament lattice could be modeled by assuming a repulsive electrostatic pressure, a weak attractive pressure, and a radial stiffness of the thick filaments (projections) that differed between relaxed and rigor conditions. Each thick filament projection could be compressed by approximately 5 or 2.6 nm requiring a force of 1.3 or 80 pN for relaxed and rigor conditions respectively.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of MgATP, MgADP, and Pi on actin movement by smooth muscle myosin.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
To test the idea that the in vitro motility assay is a simplified model system for muscle contraction, the MgATP-dependent movement of actin filaments by thiophosphorylated smooth muscle myosin was characterized in the presence of the products MgADP and inorganic phosphate. The dependence of actin filament velocity on MgATP concentration was hyperbolic with a maximum velocity of 0.6 micron/s and an apparent Km = 40 microM (30 degrees C). MgADP competitively inhibited actin movement by MgATP with a Ki = 0.25 mM. Inorganic phosphate did not affect actin filament velocity in the presence of 1 mM MgATP, but competitively inhibited movement in the presence of 50 microM MgATP with a Ki = 9.5 mM. The effects of ADP and Pi on velocity agree with fiber mechanical studies, confirming that the motility assay is an excellent system to investigate the molecular mechanisms of force generation and shortening in smooth muscle. The rate at which rigor cross-bridges can be recruited to move actin filaments was observed by initiating cross-bridge cycling from rigor by flash photolysis of caged MgATP. Following the flash, which results in a rapid increase in MgATP concentration, actin filaments experienced a MgATP-dependent delay prior to achieving steady state velocity. The delay at low MgATP concentrations was interpreted as evidence that motion generating cross-bridges are slowed by a load due to a transiently high percentage of rigor cross-bridges immediately following MgATP release.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of ATP-induced rigor cross-bridge detachment were studied by initiating relaxation in chemically skinned trabeculae of the guinea pig heart using photolytic release of ATP in the absence of calcium ions (pCa > 8). The time course of the fall in tension exhibited either an initial plateau phase of variable duration with little change in tension or a rise in tension, followed by a decrease to relaxed levels. The in-phase component of tissue stiffness initially decreased. The rate then slowed near the end of the tension plateau, indicating transient cross-bridge rebinding, before falling to relaxed levels. Estimates of the apparent second-order rate constant for ATP-induced detachment of rigor cross-bridges based on the half-time for relaxation or on the half-time to the convergence of tension records to a common time course were similar at 3 x 10(3) M-1 s-1. Because the characteristics of the mechanical transients observed during relaxation from rigor were markedly similar to those reported from studies of rabbit psoas fibers in the presence of MgADP (Dantzig, J. A., M. G. Hibberd, D. R. Trentham, and Y. E. Goldman. 1991. Cross-bridge kinetics in the presence of MgADP investigated by photolysis of caged ATP in rabbit psoas muscle fibres. J. Physiol. 432:639-680), direct measurements of MgADP using [3H]ATP in cardiac tissue in rigor were made. Results indicated that during rigor, nearly 18% of the cross-bridges in skinned trabeculae had [3H]MgADP bound. Incubation of the tissue during rigor with apyrase, an enzyme with both ADPase and ATPase activity, reduced the level of [3H]MgADP to that measured following a 2-min chase in a solution containing 5 mM unlabeled MgATP. Apyrase incubation also significantly reduced the tension and stiffness transients, so that both time courses became monotonic and could be fit with a simple model for cross-bridge detachment. The apparent second-order rate constant for ATP-induced rigor cross-bridge detachment measured in the apyrase treated tissue at 4 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 was faster than that measured in untreated tissue. Nevertheless, this rate was still over an order of magnitude slower than the analogous rate measured in previous studies of isolated cardiac actomyosin-S1. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that the presence of MgADP bound cross-bridges suppresses the inhibition normally imposed by the thin filament regulatory system in the absence of calcium ions and allows cross-bridge rebinding and force production during relaxation from rigor.  相似文献   

7.
The polarization properties of light diffracted from single-skinned fibers of skeletal muscles have been examined under conditions in which the bathing solution pH and the ionic strength are changed. For fibers in the relaxed state, we observe large decreases in both the total depolarization signal, r, and the total diffraction birefringence signal, delta nT, upon pH change from 7.0 to 8.0 at normal ionic strength. However, if the ionic strength is raised, then the r-value change as the pH changes from pH 7.0 to pH 8.0 is much smaller. If the rigor state is achieved at pH 8.0, and 0 mM ATP under either of the ionic strength conditions, the fiber can still be stretched. Rigor stiffness for this state is only approximately 20% that of the value of the stiffness at pH 7.0 rigor. Electron micrographs obtained under this pH 8.0 rigor state show that the overlap region can be decreased upon stretching the fiber, signifying a different kind of weaker-binding rigor state. Optically, the weaker-binding rigor state has a lower depolarization signal and larger form birefringence than the strong-binding rigor state. To convert from one type of rigor state (pH 7.0) to the other rigor state (pH 8.0), or vice versa, the fiber must first be relaxed. Apparently, either of the rigor states can block the full impact of the pH effect.  相似文献   

8.
When a skinned fibre prepared from frog skeletal muscle goes from the relaxed to the rigor state at a sarcomere length of about 2.2 μm, the 1, 0 transverse spacing of the filament lattice, measured by X-ray diffraction, decreases by about 11%. In measurements at various sarcomere lengths, the decrease in the spacing was approximately proportional to the degree of overlap between the thick and thin filaments. This suggests that the shrinkage of the lattice is caused by a lateral force produced by cross-bridges. In order to estimate the magnitude of the lateral force, the decrease of spacing between relaxed and rigor states was compared with the shrinkage caused osmotically by adding a high molecular weight polymer, polyvinylpyrrolidone, to the bathing solution. The results indicate that the lateral force produced per unit length of thick filament in the overlap zone is of the same order of magnitude as the axially directed force produced during maximum isometric contraction (10?10 to 10?9 N/μm).Experiments in the presence of a high concentration of polyvinylpyrrolidone (100 g/l) show that when the lattice spacing is decreased osmotically beyond a certain value, the lateral force produced when the fibre goes into rigor changes its direction, causing the lattice to swell. This result can be explained by assuming that there is an optimum interfilament spacing at which the cross-bridges produce no lateral force. At other spacings, the lateral force tends to displace the filament lattice toward that optimum value.  相似文献   

9.
The interplay between passive and active mechanical properties of indirect flight muscle of the waterbug (Lethocerus) was investigated. A functional dissection of the relative contribution of cross-bridges, actin filaments, and C filaments to tension and stiffness of passive, activated, and rigor fibers was carried out by comparing mechanical properties at different ionic strengths of sarcomeres with and without thin filaments. Selective thin filament removal was accomplished by treatment with the actin-severving protein gelsolin. Thin filament, removal had no effect on passive tension, indicating that the C filament and the actin filament are mechanically independent and that passive tension is developed by the C filament in response to sarcomere stretch. Passive tension increased steeply with sarcomere length until an elastic limit was reached at only 6-7% sarcomere extension, which corresponds to an extension of 350% of the C filament. The passive tension-length relation of insect flight muscle was analyzed using a segmental extension model of passive tension development (Wang, K, R. McCarter, J. Wright, B. Jennate, and R Ramirez-Mitchell. 1991. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 88:7101-7109). Thin filament removal greatly depressed high frequency passive stiffness (2.2 kHz) and eliminated the ionic strength sensitivity of passive stiffness. It is likely that the passive stiffness component that is removed by gelsolin is derived from weak-binding cross-bridges, while the component that remains is derived from the C filament. Our results indicate that a significant number of weak-binding cross-bridges exist in passive insect muscle at room temperature and at an ionic strength of 195 mM. Analysis of rigor muscle indicated that while rigor tension is entirely actin based, rigor stiffness contains a component that resists gelsolin treatment and is therefore likely to be C filament based. Active tension and active stiffness of unextracted fibers were directly proportional to passive tension before activation. Similarly, passive stiffness due to weak bridges also increased linearly with passive tension, up to a limit. These correlations lead us to propose a stress-activation model for insect flight muscle in which passive tension is a prerequisite for the formation of both weak-binding and strong-binding cross-bridges.  相似文献   

10.
The rate and association constants (kinetic constants) which comprise a seven state cross-bridge scheme were deduced by sinusoidal analysis in chemically skinned rabbit psoas muscle fibers at 20 degrees C, 200 mM ionic strength, and during maximal Ca2+ activation (pCa 4.54-4.82). The kinetic constants were then used to calculate the steady state probability of cross-bridges in each state as the function of MgATP, MgADP, and phosphate (Pi) concentrations. This calculation showed that 72% of available cross-bridges were (strongly) attached during our control activation (5 mM MgATP, 8 mM Pi), which agreed approximately with the stiffness ratio (active:rigor, 69 +/- 3%); active stiffness was measured during the control activation, and rigor stiffness after an induction of the rigor state. By assuming that isometric tension is a linear combination of probabilities of cross-bridges in each state, and by measuring tension as the function of MgATP, MgADP, and Pi concentrations, we deduced the force associated with each cross-bridge state. Data from the osmotic compression of muscle fibers by dextran T500 were used to deduce the force associated with one of the cross-bridge states. Our results show that force is highest in the AM*ADP.Pi state (A = actin, M = myosin). Since the state which leads into the AM*ADP.Pi state is the weakly attached AM.ADP.Pi state, we confirm that the force development occurs on Pi isomerization (AM.ADP.Pi --> AM*ADP.Pi). Our results also show that a minimal force change occurs with the release of Pi or MgADP, and that force declines gradually with ADP isomerization (AM*ADP -->AM.ADP), ATP isomerization (AM+ATP-->AM*ATP), and with cross-bridge detachment. Force of the AM state agreed well with force measured after induction of the rigor state, indicating that the AM state is a close approximation of the rigor state. The stiffness results obtained as functions of MgATP, MgADP, and Pi concentrations were generally consistent with the cross-bridge scheme.  相似文献   

11.
Bundles of rat cardiac fibers were treated with EGTA to increase the permeability of the sarcolemma to ions and small molecules. In the medium without calcium, the EGTA-treated fibers developed rigor tension dependent on the concentration of MgATP in the bathing solution: half-maximal tension was recorded at 2.5 mM MgATP and maximal tension at 0.1 mM MgATP in the medium. However, in the presence of 15 mM phosphocreatine without added creatine kinase a decrease of MgATP concentration to 0.1 mM did not result in any development of rigor tension. Phosphocreatine prevented rigor tension development in the absence of added MgATP when MgADP was added. In the presence of MgADP, phosphocreatine decreased rigor tension more rapidly and to a higher extent than added MgATP. At 5 mM MgADP, half-maximal rigor tension was observed in the presence of 2 mM phosphocreatine which is close to the Km value for phosphocreatine in the creatine-kinase reaction. These results demonstrate that the intact creatine kinase in the EGTA-treated fibers with increased sarcolemmal permeability is able to ensure rapid replenishment of MgATP in the myofibrillar compartment at the expense of phosphocreatine. The data obtained conform completely to the concept of adenine-nucleotide compartmentation in cardiac cells and of energy channelling by the phosphocreatine-creatine shuttle mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
Isolated skinned frog skeletal muscle fibers were activated (increasing [Ca2+]) and then relaxed (decreasing [Ca2+]) with solution changes, and muscle force and stiffness were recorded during the steady state. To investigate the actomyosin cycle, the biochemical species were changed (lowering [MgATP] and elevating [H2PO4-]) to populate different states in the actomyosin ATPase cycle. In solutions with 200 microM [MgATP], compared with physiological [MgATP], the slope of the plot of relative steady state muscle force vs. stiffness was decreased. At low [MgATP], cross-bridge dissociation from actin should be reduced, increasing the population of the last cross-bridge state before dissociation. These data imply that the last cross-bridge state before dissociation could be an attached low-force-producing or non-force-producing state. In solutions with 10 mM total Pi, compared to normal levels of MgATP, the maximally activated muscle force was reduced more than muscle stiffness, and the slope of the plot of relative steady state muscle force vs. stiffness was reduced. Assuming that in elevated Pi, Pi release from the cross-bridge is reversed, the state(s) before Pi release would be populated. These data are consistent with the conclusion that the cross-bridges are strongly bound to actin before Pi release. In addition, if Ca2+ activates the ATPase by allowing for the strong attachment of the myosin to actin in an A.M.ADP.Pi state, it could do so before Pi release. The calcium sensitivity of muscle force and stiffness in solutions with 4 mM [MgATP] was bracketed by that measured in solutions with 200 microM [MgATP], where muscle force and stiffness were more sensitive to calcium, and 10 mM total Pi, where muscle force and stiffness were less sensitive to calcium. The changes in calcium sensitivity were explained using a model in which force-producing and rigor cross-bridges can affect Ca2+ binding or promote the attachment of other cross-bridges to alter calcium sensitivity.  相似文献   

13.
The contraction characteristics of the dorsal longitudinal muscle of Lethocerus derollei were investigated by applying small sinusoidal length changes (+/- 1% of resting length) to glycerinated muscle bundles and studying the effect of varying the frequency from 0.1 to 10 Hz and the concentration of MgATP from 35 microM to 2.3 mM. The maximum work done by the muscle per cycle increased as the MgATP concentration was decreased from 2.3 mM to 52 microM. Between 52 and 35 microM, the maximum work suddenly changed from a positive to a negative value. The optimal frequency for maximal work shifted from low to high values with increase in the MgATP concentration. As the temperature was increased, the optimal work frequency in 2.3 mM MgATP solution shifted to a higher value. As the MgATP concentration was increased, the optimal frequency for maximal power increased. The maximal value of the power was an increasing function of the MgATP concentration, reaching a plateau above 52 microM MgATP. The muscle stiffness was a decreasing function of the MgATP concentration, and above 52 microM MgATP it reached a minimum of about 22% of that in the rigor solution. These results are discussed in relation to the crossbridge kinetics.  相似文献   

14.
The suppression of tension development by orthovanadate (Vi) was studied in mechanical experiments and by measuring the binding of radioactive Vi and nucleotides to glycerol-extracted rabbit muscle fibers. During active contractions, Vi bound to the cross-bridges and suppressed tension with an apparent second-order rate constant of 1.34 X 10(3) M-1s-1. The half-saturation concentration for tension suppression was 94 microM Vi. The incubation of fibers in Vi relaxing or rigor solutions prior to initiation of active contractions had little effect on the initial rise of active tension. The addition of adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and Vi to fibers in rigor did not cause relaxation. Suppression of tension only developed during cross-bridge cycling. After slow relaxation from rigor in 1 mM Vi and low (50 microM) MgATP concentration (0 Ca2+), radioactive Vi and ADP were trapped within the fiber. This finding indicated the formation of a stable myosin X ADP X Vi complex, as has been reported in biochemical experiments with isolated myosin. Vi and ADP trapped within the fibers were released only by subsequent cross-bridge attachment. Vi and ADP were preferentially trapped under conditions of cross-bridge cycling in the presence of ATP rather than in relaxed fibers or in rigor with ADP. These results indicate that in the normal cross-bridge cycle, inorganic phosphate (Pi) is released from actomyosin before ADP. The resulting actomyosin X ADP intermediate can bind Vi and Pi. This intermediate probably supports force. Vi behaves as a close analogue of Pi in muscle fibers, as it does with isolated actomyosin.  相似文献   

15.
Two attached non-rigor crossbridge forms in insect flight muscle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have performed thin-section electron microscopy on muscle fibers fixed in different mechanically monitored states, in order to identify structural changes in myosin crossbridges associated with force production and maintenance. Tension and stiffness of fibers from glycerinated Lethocerus flight muscle were monitored during a sequence of conditions using AMPPNP and then AMPPNP plus increasing concentrations of ethylene glycol, which brought fibers through a graded sequence from rigor relaxation. Two intermediate crossbridge forms distinct from the rigor or relaxed forms were observed. The first was produced by AMPPNP at 20 degrees C, which reduced isometric tension 60 to 70% below rigor level without reducing rigor stiffness. Electron microscopy of these fibers showed that, in spite of the drop in tension, no obvious change from the 45 degrees crossbridge angle characteristic of rigor occurred. However, the thick filament ends of the crossbridges were altered from their rigor positions, so that they now marked a 14.5 nm repeat, and formed four separate origins at each crossbridge level. The bridges were also less slewed and bent than rigor bridges, as seen in transverse sections. The second crossbridge form was seen in glycol-AMPPNP at 4 degrees C, just below the glycol concentration that produced mechanical relaxation. These fibers retained 90% of rigor stiffness at 40 Hz oscillation, but would not bear sustained tension. Stiffness was also high in the presence of calcium at room temperature under similar conditions. Electron microscopy showed crossbridges projecting from the thick filaments at an angle that centered around 90 degrees, rather than the 45 degree angle familiar from rigor. This coupling of relaxed appearance with persistent stiffness suggests that the 90 degree form may represent a weakly attached crossbridge state like that proposed to precede force development in current models of the crossbridge power stroke.  相似文献   

16.
During partial Ca2+ activation, skinned cardiac cells with sarcoplasmic reticulum destroyed by detergent developed spontaneous tension oscillations consisting of cycles (0.1-1 Hz) of rapid decrease of tension corresponding to the yield of some sarcomeres and slow redevelopment of tension corresponding to the reshortening of these sarcomeres. Such myofilament-generated tension oscillations were never observed during the full activation induced by a saturating [free Ca2+] or during the rigor tension induced by decreasing [MgATP] in the absence of free Ca2+ or when the mean sarcomere length (SL) of the preparation was greater than 3.10 microm during partial Ca2+ activation. A stiff parallel elastic element borne by a structure that could be digested by elastase hindered the study of the SL--active tension diagram in 8-13-microm-wide skinned cells from the rat ventricle, but this study was possible in 2-7-microm-wide myofibril bundles from the frog or dog ventricle. During rigor the tension decreased linearly when SL was increased from 2.35 to 3.80 microm. During full Ca2+ activation the tension decreased by less than 20% when SL was increased from 2.35 to approximately 3.10 microm. During partial Ca2+ activation the tension increased when SL was increased from 2.35 to 3.00 microm. From this observation of an apparent increase in the sensitivity of the myofilaments to Ca2+ induced by increasing SL during partial Ca2+ activation, a model was proposed that describes the tension oscillations and permits the derivation of the maximal velocity of shortening (Vmax). Vmax was increased by increasing [free Ca2+] or decreasing [free Mg2+] but not by increasing SL.  相似文献   

17.
The structure of glycerinated Lethocerus insect flight muscle fibers, relaxed by spin-labeled ATP and vanadate (Vi), was examined using X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance (e.p.r.) spectra. We obtained excellent relaxation of MgATP quality as determined by mechanical criteria, using vanadate trapping of 2' spin-labeled 3' deoxyATP at 3 degree C. In rigor fibers, when the diphosphate analog is bound in the absence of Vi, the probes on myosin heads are well-ordered, in agreement with electron microscopic and X-ray patterns showing that myosin heads are ordered when attached strongly to actin. In relaxed muscle, however, e.p.r. spectra report orientational disorder of bound (Vi-trapped) spin-labeled nucleotide, while electron microscopic and X-ray patterns both show well-ordered bridges at a uniform 90 degrees angle to the filament axis. The spin-labeled nucleotide orientation is highly disordered, but not completely isotropic; the slight anisotropy observed in probe spectra is consistent with a shift of approximately 10% of probes from angles close to 0 degrees to angles close to 90 degrees. Measurements of probe mobility suggest that the interaction between probe and protein remains as tight in relaxed fibers as in rigor, and thus that the disorder in relaxed fibers arises from disorders of (or within) the protein and not from disorder of the probe relative to the protein. Fixation of the relaxed fibers with glutaraldehyde did not alter any aspect of the spectrum of the Vi-trapped analog, including the slight order observed, showing that the extensive inter- and intra-molecular cross-linking of the first step of sample preparation for electron microscopy had not altered relaxed crossbridge orientations. Two models that may reconcile the apparently disparate results obtained on relaxed fibers are presented: (1) a rigid myosin head could possess considerable disorder in the regular array about the thick filament; or (2) the nucleotide site could be on a disordered, probably distal, domain of myosin, while a more proximal region is well ordered on the thick filament backbone. Our findings suggest that when e.p.r. probes signal disorder of a local site or domain, this is complementary, not contradictory, to signals of general order. The e.p.r. spectra show that a portion of the myosin molecule can be disordered at the same time as the X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy show the bulk of myosin head mass to be uniformly oriented and regularly arrayed.  相似文献   

18.
H Shimizu  T Fujita    S Ishiwata 《Biophysical journal》1992,61(5):1087-1098
The length of sarcomeres in isolated myofibrils fixed at both ends spontaneously oscillates when MgADP and Pi coexist with MgATP in the absence of Ca2+ (Okamura, N., and S. Ishiwata, 1988. J. Muscle Res. Cell. Motil. 9:111-119). Here, we report that MgADP and Pi function as an activator and an inhibitor, respectively, of tension development of single skeletal muscle fibers in the absence of Ca2+ and the coexistence of MgADP and Pi with MgATP induces spontaneous tension oscillation. First, the isometric tension sharply increased when the concentration of MgADP became higher than approximately 3x that of MgATP and saturated at approximately 90% of the tension obtained under full Ca2+ activation; in parallel with this sigmoidal increase of tension, MgATPase activity appeared. The inhibition of contraction by the regulatory system seems to be desuppressed by the allosteric effect of actomyosin-ADP complex, similarly to so-called rigor complex. The ADP-induced tension was decreased along a reversed sigmoidal curve by the addition of Pi; actomyosin-ADP-Pi complex, which has no desuppression function, may be formed by exogenous Pi; accompanying the decline of tension, spontaneous oscillations of tension and sarcomere length appeared. It is suggested that the length oscillation of each (half) sarcomere would occur through the transition of cross-bridges between force-generating (on) and non-force-generating (off) states, which may be regulated by the mechanical states (strain) of cross-bridges and/or thin filaments.  相似文献   

19.
It is shown that short treatment of a single skinned rigor fibre from rabbit m X psoas with 0.05% glutaraldehyde in the absence of Ca ions leads to a modified state of the contractile apparatus. After the addition of 5 mM MgATP in the absence of Ca ions to the fibre a sharp rise and subsequent slow decay of tension were observed in contrast to the tension drop in case of the control (unmodified) specimen. The tension transients following quick stretch (L 0.5%) were similar to those for Ca-activated tension. In case of the modified relaxed fibre such a phenomenon was not observed. These results can be explained by "freezing" with glutaraldehyde the thin filament structure either in the "on" or "off" states. The relation of these results to the cooperativity in the regulation mechanism of contraction is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The binding of Ca2+ to glycerinated rabbit psoas fibers of varying sarcomere length was measured with a double isotope technique and ethyleneglycol-bis-(beta-aminoethylether)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid buffers. Experiments were carried out under rigor conditions with fiber bundles pre-set at different lengths prior to extraction with detergent and glycerol. These experiments were designed to test whether rigor complex formation, determined by the degree of filament overlap, enhances Ca2+-receptor affinity in the intact filament lattice, as it does in reconstituted actomyosin systems. The Ca2+-receptor affinity, as indicated by the free Ca2+ concentration at half-saturation and by the slopes of Scatchard plots, was found to be relatively unaffected by variations in filament overlap. However, the maximum bound Ca2+ was significantly reduced in stretched fibers. With maximum filament overlap the bound Ca2+ was equivalent to 4 mol per mol troponin. When stretched to zero overlap the fibers bound a maximum of 3 mol Ca2+ per mol troponin. When fibers with maximum overlap were incubated in the presence of 5 mM MgATP there was a reduction in the number of Ca2+-binding sites equivalent to that caused by stretching the fibers. These findings, taken together with other data in the literature, suggest that in the intact filament lattice at least one of the Ca2+-binding sites is present only when cross-bridge attachments are formed.  相似文献   

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