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1.
Reinvestigation of the inhibition of actin polymerization by profilin   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
In buffer containing 50 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 1 mM EGTA, 5 mM imidazole, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM CaCl2, 0.2 mM dithiothreitol, 0.01% NaN3, and 0.2 mM ATP, the KD for the formation of the 1:1 complex between Acanthamoeba actin and Acanthamoeba profilin was about 5 microM. When the actin was modified by addition of a pyrenyl group to cysteine 374, the KD increased to about 40 microM but the critical concentration (0.16 microM) was unchanged. The very much lower affinity of profilin for modified actin explains the anomalous critical concentrations curves obtained for 5-10% pyrenyl-labeled actin in the presence of profilin and the apparently weak inhibition by profilin of the rate of filament elongation when polymerization is quantified by the increase in fluorescence of pyrenyl-labeled actin. Light-scattering assays of the polymerization of unmodified actin in the absence and presence of profilin gave a similar value for the KD (about 5-10 microM) when determined by the increase in the apparent critical concentration of F-actin at steady state at all concentrations of actin up to 20 microM and by the inhibition of the initial rates of polymerization of actin nucleated by either F-actin or covalently cross-linked actin dimer. In the same buffer, but with ADP instead of ATP, the critical concentration of actin was higher (4.9 microM) and the KD of the profilin-actin complex was lower for both unmodified (1-2 microM) and 100% pyrenyl-labeled actin (4.9 microM).  相似文献   

2.
The correlation between the time courses of actin polymerization under continuous sonication and the associated ATP hydrolysis has been studied. ATP hydrolysis was not mechanistically coupled to polymerization, i.e. not necessary for polymerization, but occurred on F-actin in a subsequent monomolecular reaction. Under sonication, polymerization was complete in 10 s while hydrolysis of ATP on the polymer required 200 s. A value of 0.023 s-1 was found for the first order rate constant of ATP hydrolysis on the polymer at 25 degrees C, pH 7.8, in the presence of 0.2 mM ATP, 0.1 mM CaCl2, and 1 mM MgCl2, independent of the F-actin concentration. The conversion of ATP X F-actin to ADP X F-actin was accompanied by an increase in fluorescence of a pyrenyl probe covalently attached to actin, consistent with a 2-fold greater fluorescence for ADP X F-actin than for ATP X F-actin, with a rate constant of 0.022 s-1. In contrast, the fluorescence of F-actin labeled with 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzeno-2-oxa-1,3-diazole did not change significantly when ATP or ADP was bound. The direct consequence of the uncoupling between polymerization and ATP hydrolysis is the formation of an ATP cap at the ends of the filaments, which maintains the stability of the polymer, while most of the filament contains bound ADP. The heterogeneity of the filament with respect to ATP and ADP results in a nonlinear relationship between the rate of elongation and the concentration of G-actin with a discontinuity at the critical concentration, where the rate of growth is zero. In this respect, F-actin in ATP behaves similarly to microtubules in GTP.  相似文献   

3.
Isolation and characterization of covalently cross-linked actin dimer   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Covalently cross-linked actin dimer was isolated from rabbit skeletal muscle F-actin reacted with phenylenebismaleimide (Knight, P., and Offer, G. (1978) Biochem. J. 175, 1023-1032). The UV spectrum of the purified cross-linked actin dimer, in a nonpolymerizing buffer, was very similar to that of native F-actin and not to the spectrum of G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer polymerized to filaments that were indistinguishable in the electron microscope from F-actin made from native G-actin and that were similar to native F-actin in their ability to activate the Mg2+-ATPase of myosin subfragment-1. The critical concentrations of polymerization of cross-linked actin dimer in 0.5 mM and 2.0 mM MgCl2, 2 to 4 microM, and 1 to 2 microM, respectively, were similar to the values for native G-actin. Cross-linked actin dimer contained 2 mol of bound nucleotide/mol of dimer. One bound nucleotide exchanged with ATP in solution with a t 1/2 of 55 min and with ADP with a t 1/2 of 5 h. The second bound nucleotide exchanged much more slowly. The more rapidly exchangeable site contained 10 to 15% bound ADP.Pi and 85 to 90% bound ATP while the second site contained much less, if any, bound ADP.Pi. Cross-linked actin dimer had an ATPase activity in 0.5 mM MgCl2 that was 7 times greater than the ATPase activity of native G-actin and that was also stimulated by cytochalasin D. These data are discussed in relation to the possible role of ATP in actin polymerization and function with the speculation that the cross-linked actin dimer may serve simultaneously as a useful model for each of the two different ends of native F-actin.  相似文献   

4.
A protein which cross-links actin filaments in a nucleotide-sensitive manner has been purified to homogeneity from Acanthamoeba castellanii. This protein, GF-210, is a slightly asymmetric molecule composed of six subunits, each with an apparent mass of 35,000 Da. As determined by the method of falling ball vicometry, GF-210 was shown to cross-link actin filaments at hexamer:actin molar ratios of 1:500, with gelation occurring at molar ratios of 1:300 and higher. Actin gels did not form in the presence of 10 microM ATP, and filament cross-linking was completely inhibited by 100 microM ATP. Although ATP was the most effective inhibitor of actin filament cross-linking, other phospho-compounds including ADP, GTP, sodium phosphate, and sodium pyrophosphate prevented gelation at concentrations lower than 1.5 mM. In contrast, 50 mM KCl was required to inhibit the formation of actin networks. Direct binding studies showed that GF-210 binds to F-actin with a KD of 1.2 microM in the absence of ATP but with a KD of 72.8 microM in the presence of 2 mM ATP. This weakening of the interaction between F-actin and GF-210 may explain the inhibition of GF-210-induced actin cross-linking by nucleotides and other phospho-compounds.  相似文献   

5.
M Oosawa  K Maruyama 《FEBS letters》1987,213(2):433-437
Phalloidin (2 mol per mol actin)-treated pyrenyl F-actin showed a critical concentration of 1.8 microM in the presence of 10 mM KCl, 0.2 mM ADP, and 5 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 8.0 at 25 degrees C. The filament weight concentration did not change at all during and after sonication, yet degrees of flow birefringence increased and the filament number concentration decreased after the termination of sonication. The latter changes were not affected by EDTA, but inhibited by beta-actinin. These observations suggest that reannealing of short pieces of phalloidin-treated actin filaments fragmented during sonication takes place during recovery after sonication.  相似文献   

6.
It was shown that substoichiometric concentrations of chaetoglobosin J, one of the fungal metabolites belonging to cytochalasins, inhibited the elongation at the barbed end of an actin filament. Stoichiometric concentrations of chaetoglobosin J decreased both the rate and the extent of actin polymerization in the presence of 75 mM KCl, 0.2 mM ATP and 10 mM Tris-HCl buffer at pH 8.0 and 25 degrees C. In contrast, stoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D accelerated actin polymerization. Chaetoglobosin J slowly depolymerized F-actin to G-actin until an equilibrium was reached. Analyses by a number of different methods showed the increase of monomer concentration at equilibrium to depend on chaetoglobosin J concentrations. F-actin under the influence of stoichiometric concentrations of chaetoglobosin J only slightly activated the Mg2+-enhanced ATPase activity of myosin at low ionic strength. It is suggested that when the structure of the chaetoglobosin-affected actin filaments is modified, the equilibrium is shifted to the monomer side, and the interaction with myosin is weakened.  相似文献   

7.
The rate of ATP hydrolysis in solutions of F-actin at steady state in 50 mM KC1, 0.1 mM CaC12 was inhibited by AMP and ADP. The inhibition was competitive with ATP (Km of about 600 microM) with Ki values of 9 microM for AMP and 44 microM for ADP. ATP hydrolysis was inhibited greater than 95% by 1 mM AMP. AMP had no effect on the time course of actin polymerization, ATP hydrolysis during polymerization, or the critical actin concentration. Simultaneous measurements of G-actin/F-actin subunit exchange and nucleotide exchange showed that nucleotide exchange occurred much more rapidly than subunit exchange; during the experiment over 50% of the F-actin-bound nucleotide was replaced when less than 1% of the F-actin subunits had exchanged. When AMP was present it was incorporated into the polymer, preventing incorporation of ADP from ATP in solution. F-actin with bound Mg2+ was much less sensitive to AMP than F-actin with bound Ca2+. These data provide evidence for an ATP hydrolysis cycle associated with direct exchange of F-actin-bound ADP for ATP free in solution independent of monomer-polymer end interactions. This exchange and hydrolysis of nucleotide may be enhanced when Ca2+ is bound to the F-actin protomers.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the effects of profilin on nucleotide binding to actin and on steady state actin polymerization. The rate constants for the dissociation of ATP and ADP from monomeric Mg-actin at physiological conditions are 0.003 and 0.009 s-1, respectively. Profilin increases these dissociation rate constants to 0.08 s-1 for MgATP-actin and 1.4 s-1 for MgADP-actin. Thus, profilin can increase the rate of exchange of actin-bound ADP for ATP by 140-fold. The affinity of profilin for monomeric actin is found to be similar for MgATP-actin and MgADP-actin. Continuous sonication was used to allow study of solutions having sustained high filament end concentrations. During sonication at steady state, F-actin depolymerizes toward the critical concentration of ADP-actin [Pantaloni, D., et al. (1984)J. Biol. Chem. 259, 6274-6283], our analysis indicates that under these conditions a significant number of filaments contain terminal ADP-actin subunits. Addition of profilin to this system increases the polymer concentration and increases the steady state ATPase activity during sonication. These data are explained by the fast exchange of ATP for ADP on the profilin-ADP-actin complex, resulting in rapid ATP-actin regeneration. An important function of profilin may be to provide the growing ends of filaments with ATP-actin during periods when the monomer cycling rate exceeds the intrinsic nucleotide exchange rate of monomeric actin.  相似文献   

9.
Study of actin filament ends in the human red cell membrane   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
There is conflicting evidence concerning the state of the actin protofilaments in the membrane cytoskeleton of the human red cell. To resolve this uncertainty, we have analysed their characteristics with respect to nucleation of G-actin polymerization. The effects of cytochalasin E on the rate of elongation of the protofilaments have been measured in a medium containing 0.1 M-sodium chloride and 5 mM-magnesium chloride, using pyrene-labelled G-actin. At an initial monomer concentration far above the critical concentration for the negative ("pointed") end of F-actin, high concentrations of cytochalasin reduce the elongation rate of free F-actin by about 70%. The residual rate is presumed to correspond to the elongation rate at the negative ends. By contrast, the elongation rate on red cell ghosts or cytoskeletons falls to zero, allowing for the background of self-nucleated polymerization of the G-actin. The critical concentration of the actin in the red cell membrane has been measured after elongation of the filaments by added pyrenyl-G-actin in the same solvent. It was found to be 0.07 microM, compared with 0.11 microM under the same conditions for actin alone. This is consistent with prediction for the case of blocked negative ends on the red cell actin. The rate of elongation of actin filaments, free and in the red cell membrane cytoskeleton, has been measured as a function of the concentration of an added actin-capping protein, plasma gelsolin, with a high affinity for the positive ends. The elongation rate falls linearly with increasing gelsolin concentration until it approaches a minimum when the gelsolin has bound to all positive filament ends. The elongation rate at this point corresponds to the activity of the negative ends, and its ratio to the unperturbed polymerization rate (in the absence of capping proteins) is indistinguishable from zero in the case of ghosts, but about 1 : 4 in the case of F-actin. When ATP is replaced in the system by ADP, so that the critical concentrations at the two filament ends are equalized, the difference is equally well-marked: for F-actin, the rate at the equivalence point is about 40% of that in the absence of capping protein, whereas for ghosts the nucleated polymerization rate at the equivalence point is again zero, indicating that under these conditions the negative ends contribute little or not at all to the rate of elongation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1984,98(6):1919-1925
Physarum profilin reduces the rates of nucleation and elongation of F- actin and also reduces the extent of polymerization of actin at the steady state in a concentration-dependent fashion. The apparent critical concentration for polymerization of actin is increased by the addition of profilin. These results can be explained by the idea that Physarum profilin forms a 1:1 complex with G-actin and decreases the concentration of actin available for polymerization. The dissociation constant for binding of profilin to G-actin is estimated from the kinetics of polymerization of G-actin and elongation of F-actin nuclei and from the increase of apparent critical concentration in the presence of profilin. The dissociation constants for binding of Physarum profilin to Physarum and muscle actins under physiological ionic conditions are in the ranges of 1.4-3.7 microM and 11.3-28.5 microM, respectively. When profilin is added to an F-actin solution, profilin binds to G-actin which co-exists with F-actin, and then G- actin is dissociated from F-actin to compensate for the decrease of the concentration of free G-actin and to keep it constant at the critical concentration. At the steady state, free G-actin of the critical concentration is in equilibrium not only with F-actin but also with profilin-G-actin complex. The stoichiometry of 1:1 for the formation of complex between profilin and G-actin is directly shown by means of chemical cross-linking.  相似文献   

11.
Profilin inhibits the rate of nucleation of actin polymerization and the rate of filament elongation and also reduces the concentration of F-actin at steady state. Addition of profilin to solutions of F-actin causes depolymerization. The same steady state concentrations of polymerized and nonpolymerized actin are reached whether profilin is added before initiation of polymerization or after polymerization is complete. The KD for formation of the 1:1 complex between Acanthamoeba profilin and Acanthamoeba actin is in the range of 4 to 11 microM; the KD for the reaction between Acanthamoeba profilin and rabbit skeletal muscle actin is about 60 to 80 microM, irrespective of the concentrations of KCl or MgCl2. The critical concentration of actin for polymerization and the KD for the actin-profilin interaction are independent of each other; therefore, a change in the critical concentration of actin alters the amount of actin bound to profilin at steady state. As a consequence, the presence of profilin greatly amplifies the effects of small changes in the actin critical concentration on the concentration of F-actin. Profilin also inhibits the ATPase activity of monomeric actin, the profilin-actin complex being entirely inactive.  相似文献   

12.
Substoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D inhibited the rate of polymerization of actin in 0.5 mM MgCl2, increased its critical concentration and lowered its steady state viscosity. Stoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D in 0.5 mM MgCl2 and even substoichiometric concentrations of cytochalasin D in 30 mM KCl, however, accelerated the rate of actin polymerization, although still lowering the final steady state viscosity. Cytochalasin B, at all concentrations in 0.5 mM MgCl2 or in 30 mM KCl, accelerated the rate of polymerization and lowered the final steady state viscosity. In 0.5 mM MgCl2, cytochalasin D uncoupled the actin ATPase activity from actin polymerization, increasing the ATPase rate by at least 20 times while inhibiting polymerization. Cytochalasin B had a very much lower stimulating effect. Neither cytochalasin D nor B affected the actin ATPase activity in 30 mM KCl. The properties of cytochalasin E were intermediate between those of cytochalasin D and B. Cytochalasin D also stimulated the ATPase activity of monomeric actin in the absence of MgCl2 and KCl and, to a much greater extent, stimulated the ATPase activity of monomeric actin below its critical concentration in 0.5 mM MgCl2. Both above and below its critical concentration and in the presence and absence of cytochalasin D, the initial rate of actin ATPase activity, when little or no polymerization had occurred, was directly proportional to the actin concentration and, therefore, apparently was independent of actin-actin interactions. To rationalize all these data, a working model has been proposed in which the first step of actin polymerization is the conversion of monomeric actin-bound ATP, A . ATP, to monomeric actin-bound ADP and Pi, A* . ADP . Pi, which, like the preferred growing end of an actin filament, can bind cytochalasins.  相似文献   

13.
Polymerization under sonication has been developed as a new method to study the rapid polymerization of actin with a large number of elongating sites. The theory proposed assumes that filaments under sonication are maintained at a constant length by the constant input of energy. The data obtained for the reversible polymerization of ADP-actin under sonication have been successfully analyzed according to the proposed model and, therefore, validate the model. The results obtained for the polymerization of ATP-actin under sonication demonstrate the involvement of ATP hydrolysis in the polymerization process. At high actin concentration, polymerization was fast enough, as compared to ATP hydrolysis on the F-actin, to obtain completion of the reversible polymerization of ATP-actin before significant hydrolysis of ATP occurred. A critical concentration of 3 microM was determined as the ratio of the dissociation and association rate constants for the interaction of ATP-actin with the ATP filament ends in 1 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM ATP. The plot of the rate of elongation of filaments versus actin monomer concentration exhibited an upward deviation at high actin concentration that is consistent with this result. The fact that F-actin at steady state is more stable than the ATP-F-actin polymer at equilibrium suggests that the interaction between ADP-actin and ATP-actin subunits at the end of the ATP-capped filament is much stronger than the interaction between two ATP-actin subunits.  相似文献   

14.
Ca2+-calmodulin-dependent polymerization of actin by myelin basic protein   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The interaction between myelin basic protein (MBP) and G-actin was studied under nonpolymerizing conditions, i.e.,2mM HEPES, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM CaCl2 and 0.2 mM ATP. Fluorescence studies using pyrenyl-actin and the measurements of ATP hydrolysis rate show that MBP induces changes in the structure of the actin monomer similar to those occurring during polymerization by salt. Electron microscope observations of the MBP-G-actin complex reveal the presence of filamentous structures which appear as separate filaments or as bundles of filaments in lateral association. These filaments are polar as visualized by attachment of heavy meromyosin. The biochemical data together with electron microscope observations suggest that the binding of MBP to G-actin under non-polymerizing conditions induces an interaction between actin monomers leading to the formation of filamentous structures which may be similar to F-actin filaments. The effects of MBP on G-actin can be reversed by calmodulin in the presence of Ca2+.  相似文献   

15.
The formation of actin oligomers studied by analytical ultracentrifugation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The small oligomers formed from Mg-G-actin under favorable conditions were studied by sedimentation velocity ultracentrifugation. The critical concentration of actin at pH 7.8 in the presence of 100 microM MgCl2 and 200 microM ATP was 12.5 +/- 2.8 microM. Under these conditions, about 15% of 7.5 microM Mg-actin was converted to oligomers of subunit size four to eight in 5 h at 20 degrees C. In 100 microM MgCl2 and no free ATP, the critical concentration was about 6.5 microM, and about 22% of 7.5 microM Mg-actin was converted to dimers in 80 min. There were no detectable higher oligomers or F-actin present in either case. As determined by the analysis of ATP hydrolysis, most, if not all, of the oligomer subunits contained ATP. When 28.5 microM actin was polymerized to steady state in 100 microM MgCl2 and 200 microM ATP, about 50% of the actin was present as F-actin, consistent with the critical concentration (approximately 12.5 microM), about 50% as oligomers as large as seven subunits, and only about 5% as monomers. When solutions containing oligomers were diluted the oligomers dissociated. Alternatively, when the MgCl2 concentration was raised to 1 mM, the solutions containing oligomers polymerized more rapidly than monomeric Mg-G-actin and to the same final steady state. These data are entirely consistent with the condensation-elongation model for helical polymerization proposed by Oosawa and Kasai (Oosawa, F., and Kasai, M. (1962) J. Mol. Biol. 4, 10-21) according to which, under certain conditions, substantial amounts of short linear and helical oligomers should be formed below the critical concentration and linear oligomers should coexist with monomers and F-actin at steady state.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Assembled actin filaments support cellular signaling, intracellular trafficking, and cytokinesis. ATP hydrolysis triggered by actin assembly provides the structural cues for filament turnover in vivo. Here, we present the cryo-electron microscopic (cryo-EM) structure of filamentous actin (F-actin) in the presence of phosphate, with the visualization of some α-helical backbones and large side chains. A complete atomic model based on the EM map identified intermolecular interactions mediated by bound magnesium and phosphate ions. Comparison of the F-actin model with G-actin monomer crystal structures reveals a critical role for bending of the conserved proline-rich loop in triggering phosphate release following ATP hydrolysis. Crystal structures of G-actin show that mutations in this loop trap the catalytic site in two intermediate states of the ATPase cycle. The combined structural information allows us to propose a detailed molecular mechanism for the biochemical events, including actin polymerization and ATPase activation, critical for actin filament dynamics.  相似文献   

18.
T Keiser  A Schiller  A Wegner 《Biochemistry》1986,25(17):4899-4906
The nonlinear increase of the elongation rate of actin filaments above the critical monomer concentration was investigated by nucleated polymerization of actin. Significant deviations from linearity were observed when actin was polymerized in the presence of magnesium ions. When magnesium ions were replaced by potassium or calcium ions, no deviations from linearity could be detected. The nonlinearity was analyzed by two simple assembly mechanisms. In the first model, if the ATP hydrolysis by polymeric actin is approximately as fast as the incorporation of monomers into filaments, terminal subunits of lengthening filaments are expected to carry to some extent ADP. As ADP-containing subunits dissociate from the ends of actin filaments faster than ATP-containing subunits, the rate of elongation of actin filaments would be nonlinearly correlated with the monomer concentration. In the second model (conformational change model), actin monomers and filament subunits were assumed to occur in two conformations. The association and dissociation rates of actin molecules in the two conformations were thought to be different. The equilibrium distribution between the two conformations was assumed to be different for monomers and filament subunits. The ATP hydrolysis was thought to lag behind polymerization and conformational change. As under the experimental conditions the rate of ATP hydrolysis by polymeric actin was independent of the concentration of filament ends, the observed nonlinear increase of the rate of elongation with the monomer concentration above the critical monomer concentration was unlikely to be caused by ATP hydrolysis at the terminal subunits. The conformational change model turned out to be the simplest assembly mechanism by which all available experimental data could be explained.  相似文献   

19.
Current theory and experiments describing actin polymerization suggest that site-specific cleavage of bound nucleotide following F-actin filament formation causes the barbed ends of microfilaments to be capped first with ATP subunits, then with ADP bound to inorganic phosphate (ADP.Pi) at steady-state. The barbed ends of depolymerizing filaments consist of ADP subunits. The decrease in stability of the barbed-end cap accompanying the transition from ADP.Pi to ADP allows nucleotide hydrolysis and subsequent loss of Pi to regulate F-actin filament dynamics. We describe a novel computational model of nucleotide capping that simulates both the spatial and temporal properties of actin polymerization. This model has been used to test the effects of high filament concentration on the behavior of the ATP hydrolysis cycle observed during polymerization. The model predicts that under conditions of high microfilament concentration an ADP cap can appear during steady-state at the barbed ends of filaments. We show that the presence of the cap can be accounted for by a kinetic model and predict the relationship between the nucleotide concentration ratio [ATP]/[ADP], the F-actin filament concentration, and the steady-state distribution of barbed-end ADP cap lengths. The possible consequences of this previously unreported phenomenon as a regulator of cytoskeletal behavior are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The extent of actin polymerization has been studied for samples in which the bound nucleotide of the actin was ATP, ADP, or an analog of ATP that was not split (AMPPNP). The equilibrium constants for the addition of a monomer to a polymer end were determined from the concentration of monomer coexisting with the polymer. An analysis of these results concludes that the bound ATP on G-actin provides little energy to promote the polymerization of the actin. AMPPNP was incorporated into F-actin and the interaction of F-actin · AMPPNP with myosin was studied. F-actin · AMPPNP activated the ATPase of myosin to the same extent as did F-actin · ADP. However, the rate of superprecipitation was slower in the case of F-actin · AMPPNP than in the control.  相似文献   

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