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1.
Smooth muscle contraction is controlled in part by the state of phosphorylation of myosin. A recently discovered actin and calmodulin-binding protein, named caldesmon, may also be involved in regulation of smooth muscle contraction. Caldesmon cross-links actin filaments and also inhibits actin-activated ATP hydrolysis by myosin, particularly in the presence of tropomyosin. We have studied the effect of caldesmon on the rate of hydrolysis of ATP by skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1, a system in which phosphorylation of the myosin is not important in regulation. Caldesmon is a very effective inhibitor of ATP hydrolysis giving up to 95% inhibition. At low ionic strength (approximately 20 mM) this effect does not require smooth muscle tropomyosin, whereas at high ionic strength (approximately 120 mM) tropomyosin enhances the inhibitory activity of caldesmon at low caldesmon concentrations. Cross-linking of actin is not essential for inhibition of ATP hydrolysis to occur since at high ionic strength there is very little cross-linking as determined by a low speed sedimentation assay. Under all conditions examined, the decrease in the rate of ATP hydrolysis is accompanied by a decrease in the binding of myosin subfragment-1 to actin. Furthermore, caldesmon weakens the equilibrium binding of myosin subfragment-1 to actin in the presence of pyrophosphate. We conclude that caldesmon has a general weakening effect on the binding of skeletal muscle myosin subfragment-1 to actin and that this weakening in binding may be responsible for inhibition of ATP hydrolysis.  相似文献   

2.
Several structural and enzymatic properties of myosin from skeletal muscles of neonatal and adult rabbits were compared. Electrophoretic analyses and proteolysis experiments indicated that differences between the two myosin types could be attributed to their heavy subunits. Circular dichroism measurements of subfragment-1 species, and trypsin-digested derivatives showed that the neonatal protein contained less alpha-helices than the adult form. The Mg2(+)-ATPase activity of neonatal myosin was lower than that of adult myosin, especially in the presence of actin. In comparison with adult subfragment-1, it was found that the binding of ATP analogues such as adenosine 5'-[beta, gamma-imino]triphosphate and PPi, or that of ATP (as deduced from the apparent KmATP) to neonatal subfragment-1 in the presence of actin was enhanced, while that of ADP was decreased. On the other hand, the association of actin with the ADP - neonatal-subfragment-1 complex was weaker. These features must be expressed in the cyclical actin-myosin association/dissociation steps occurring in ATP hydrolysis, and more particularly in the reassociation of actin with the ATP-hydrolysis-products - myosin complex.  相似文献   

3.
In the present study, the question of whether the two myosin active sites are identical with respect to ATP binding and hydrolysis was reinvestigated. The stoichiometry of ATP binding to myosin, heavy meromyosin, and subfragment-1 was determined by measuring the fluorescence enhancement caused by the binding of MgATP. The amount of irreversible ATP binding and the magnitude of the initial ATP hydrolysis (initial Pi burst) was determined by measuring [gamma-32P]ATP hydrolysis with and without a cold ATP chase in a three-syringe quenched flow apparatus. The results show that, under a wide variety of experimental conditions: 1) the stoichiometry of ATP binding ranges from 0.8 to 1 mol of ATP/myosin active site for myosin, heavy meromyosin, and subfragment-1, 2) 80 to 100% of this ATP binding is irreversible, 3) 70 to 90% of the irreversibly bound ATP is hydrolyzed in the initial Pi burst, 4) the first order rate constant for the rate-limiting step in ATP hydrolysis by heavy meromyosin is equal to the steady state heavy meromyosin ATPase rate only if the latter is calculated on the basis of two active sites per heavy meromyosin molecule. It is concluded that the two active sites of myosin are identical with respect to ATP binding and hydrolysis.  相似文献   

4.
Polarized fluorimetry technique and ghost muscle fibers containing tropomyosin were used to study effects of caldesmon (CaD) and recombinant peptides CaDH1 (residues 506-793), CaDH2 (residues 683-767), CaDH12 (residues 506-708) and 658C (residues 658-793) on the orientation and mobility of fluorescent label 1.5-IAEDANS specifically bound to Cys-707 of myosin subfragment-1 (S1) in the absence of nucleotide, and in the presence of MgADP, MgAMP-PNP, MgATPgammaS or MgATP. It was shown that at modelling different intermediates of actomyosin ATPase, the orientation and mobility of dye dipoles changed discretely, suggesting a multi-step changing of the myosin head structural state in ATP hydrolysis cycle. The maximum difference in orientation and mobility of the oscillator (4 degrees and 30%, respectively) was observed between actomyosin in the presence of MgATP, and actomyosin in the presence of MgADP. Caldesmon actin-binding sites C and B' inhibit formation of actomyosin strong binding states, while site B activates it. It is suggested that actin-myosin interaction in ATP hydrolysis cycle initiates nucleotide-dependent rotation of myosin motor domain, or that of its site for dye binding as well as the change in myosin head mobility. Caldesmon drives ATP hydrolysis cycle by shifting the equilibrium between strong and weak forms of actin-myosin binding.  相似文献   

5.
Myosin VI has an unexpectedly large swing of its lever arm (powerstroke) that optimizes its unique reverse direction movement. The basis for this is an unprecedented rearrangement of the subdomain to which the lever arm is attached, referred to as the converter. It is unclear at what point(s) in the myosin VI ATPase cycle rearrangements in the converter occur, and how this would effect lever arm position. We solved the structure of myosin VI with an ATP analogue (ADP.BeF3) bound in its nucleotide-binding pocket. The structure reveals that no rearrangement in the converter occur upon ATP binding. Based on previously solved myosin structures, our structure suggests that no reversal of the powerstroke occurs during detachment of myosin VI from actin. The structure also reveals novel features of the myosin VI motor that may be important in maintaining the converter conformation during detachment from actin, and other features that may promote rapid rearrangements in the structure following actin detachment that enable hydrolysis of ATP.  相似文献   

6.
Nanoelectrospray ionization mass spectrometry has been used to measure the binding of ATP and ADP to the active site of rabbit skeletal myosin-S1. Increases in the molecular mass of myosin-S1 of 425 +/- 10 Da were obtained with the binding of ADP to the active site and by 530 +/- 10 Da with either ATP or hydrolysis products ADP and phosphate. Active site titrations of myosin-S1 with ADP gave a stoichiometry of approximately 1 ADP/S1 with an affinity in the micromolar range. The binding of ATP to myosin-S1 could be observed in the presence of up to 60 muM of excess MgATP without nonspecific binding of MgATP to the myosin. Conversion of the nucleotide complex containing an equilibrium mixture of ATP and ADP-Pi bound to myosin-S1 to one containing only bound ADP occurs at a rate consistent with that of the known steady-state rate of ATP hydrolysis. We expect this method to be of considerable use in the analysis of ligand binding and hydrolysis by the active sites of expressed myosin and myosin subfragments, which are not available in sufficient quantities for conventional methods of measurement of ligand binding.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanism by which motor proteins hydrolyze ATP and move along cytoskeletal filaments is still unknown. One approach to deciphering the mechanism is to correlate steps of ATP hydrolysis with structural states of the motors to determine the changes the motors undergo during the hydrolysis cycle. Unfortunately, available crystal structures represent only a few steps of the cycle and obtaining atomic structures that represent the motors bound to their filament has been difficult. Now, two new myosin crystal structures have been reported that show features expected for myosin motors bound in rigor to actin. The two new structures show changes at both the actin-binding surface and the active site that have not been observed previously.  相似文献   

8.
The molecular mechanism of muscle contraction is based on the ATP-dependent cyclic interaction of myosin heads with actin filaments. Myosin head (myosin subfragment-1, S1) consists of two major domains, the motor domain responsible for ATP hydrolysis and actin binding, and the regulatory domain stabilized by light chains. Essential light chain-1 (LC1) is of particular interest since it comprises a unique N-terminal extension (NTE) which can bind to actin thus forming an additional actin-binding site on the myosin head and modulating its motor activity. However, it remains unknown what happens to the NTE of LC1 when the head binds ATP during ATPase cycle and dissociates from actin. We assume that in this state of the head, when it undergoes global ATP-induced conformational changes, the NTE of LC1 can interact with the motor domain. To test this hypothesis, we applied fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) to measure the distances from various sites on the NTE of LC1 to S1 active site in the motor domain and changes in these distances upon formation of S1-ADP-BeFx complex (stable analog of S11-AТP state). For this, we produced recombinant LC1 cysteine mutants, which were first fluorescently labeled with 1,5-IAEDANS (donor) at different positions in their NTE and then introduced into S1; the ADP analog (TNP-ADP) bound to the S1 active site was used as an acceptor. The results show that formation of S1-ADP-BeFx complex significantly decreases the distances from Cys residues in the NTE of LC1 to TNP-ADP in the S1 active site; this effect was the most pronounced for Cys residues located near the LC1 N-terminus. These results support the concept of the ATP-induced transient interaction of the LC1 N-terminus with the S1 motor domain.  相似文献   

9.
M proteins are antiphagocytic molecules on the surface of group A streptococci having physical characteristics similar to those of mammalian tropomyosin. Both are alpha-helical coiled-coil fibrous structures with a similar seven-residue periodicity of nonpolar and charged amino acids. To determine if M protein is functionally similar to tropomyosin we studied the interaction of M protein with F-actin. At low ionic strength, M protein binds to actin weakly with a stoichiometry different from that of tropomyosin. M protein does not compete with tropomyosin for the binding to actin, indicating that it is functionally different from tropomyosin. M protein does compete with myosin subfragment-1 for binding to actin and induces the formation of bundles of actin filaments. The formation of actin aggregates is associated with a sharp reduction in the rate of ATP hydrolysis by subfragment-1. Intact streptococci having M protein on their surface are shown to bind to actin.  相似文献   

10.
A conventional five-step chemo-mechanical cycle of the myosin–actin ATPase reaction, which implies myosin detachment from actin upon release of hydrolysis products (ADP and phosphate, Pi) and binding of a new ATP molecule, is able to fit the [Pi] dependence of the force and number of myosin motors during isometric contraction of skeletal muscle. However, this scheme is not able to explain why the isometric ATPase rate of fast skeletal muscle is decreased by an increase in [Pi] much less than the number of motors. The question can be solved assuming the presence of a branch in the cycle: in isometric contraction, when the force generation process by the myosin motor is biased at the start of the working stroke, the motor can detach at an early stage of the ATPase cycle, with Pi still bound to its catalytic site, and then rapidly release the hydrolysis products and bind another ATP. In this way, the model predicts that in fast skeletal muscle the energetic cost of isometric contraction increases with [Pi]. The large dissociation constant of the product release in the branched pathway allows the isometric myosin–actin reaction to fit the equilibrium constant of the ATPase.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of various factors on the interaction of phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin with actin was examined. It was found that the difference between the values of specific activity of the two myosin forms of actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase is affected by changes in KCl, MgATP and actin concentration. The effect of increased pH on the differences in the rate of ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin containing phosphorylated myosin as compared with that of the dephosphorylated one, observed in the presence of EGTA, is abolished by addition of Ca2+. Tropomyosin strongly inhibits the actin-stimulated Mg2+-ATPase of phosphorylated myosin (by about 60%). The tropomyosin-troponin complex and native tropomyosin lowered the rate of ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin containing both phosphorylated and dephosphorylated myosin by about of 60% of the value obtained in the absence of those proteins. These results indicate that the change of negative charge on the myosin head due to phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of myosin light chains modulates the actin-myosin interaction at different steps of the ATP hydrolysis cycle. Phosphorylation of myosin seems to be a factor decreasing the rate of ATP hydrolysis by actomyosin under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

12.
A mechanism of muscle contraction is presented in which energy from the hydrolysis of MgATP is transferred directly to conformational strain in a flexible segment of the myosin head. That segment is proximal to both the active site and the subfragment 1—subfragment 2 hinge (the portion of the myosin molecule that connects each of its two enzymatically active globular heads to the long thin helical body). This proximity allows configurational changes at the active site, which are an intrinsic part of the enzymatic mechanism, to impose a localized strain, or distortion, near the hinge. The energy, trapped in the protein this way, is subsequently used for mechanical work when other enzymatically-induced conformational changes free the strained segment of the myosin head to unbend. As this happens, the head rotates and the distal end (opposite the hinge) attaches to the actin filament and pulls on it. In this mechanism, actin interacts with myosin in two different ways: (1) at the active site where it activates a step in the hydrolysis of MgATP that frees the head to rotate; (2) at the distal end of myosin, where it forms the grip through which the rotating head pulls on the actin filament. The first interaction allows actin to initiate primary movement of the myosin head; the second directs the force and allows the movement of the head to be used for the sliding motion of the actin and myosin filaments during contraction. In this model, there are also two different energy transfers: one occurs in the transduction process itself when energy from hydrolysis is trapped as conformational distortion in the hinge region; the other occurs, reversibly, when actin and myosin form and then break the distal grip; in this second transfer there is no net energy change in the course of a cycle. A chemical mechanism is suggested to explain actin-activation of hydrolysis at the active site-hinge region.  相似文献   

13.
Gerald S. Manning 《Biopolymers》2016,105(12):887-897
The dynamic process underlying muscle contraction is the parallel sliding of thin actin filaments along an immobile thick myosin fiber powered by oar‐like movements of protruding myosin cross bridges (myosin heads). The free energy for functioning of the myosin nanomotor comes from the hydrolysis of ATP bound to the myosin heads. The unit step of translational movement is based on a mechanical‐chemical cycle involving ATP binding to myosin, hydrolysis of the bound ATP with ultimate release of the hydrolysis products, stress‐generating conformational changes in the myosin cross bridge, and relief of built‐up stress in the myosin power stroke. The cycle is regulated by a transition between weak and strong actin–myosin binding affinities. The dissociation of the weakly bound complex by addition of salt indicates the electrostatic basis for the weak affinity, while structural studies demonstrate that electrostatic interactions among negatively charged amino acid residues of actin and positively charged residues of myosin are involved in the strong binding interface. We therefore conjecture that intermediate states of increasing actin–myosin engagement during the weak‐to‐strong binding transition also involve electrostatic interactions. Methods of polymer solution physics have shown that the thin actin filament can be regarded in some of its aspects as a net negatively charged polyelectrolyte. Here we employ polyelectrolyte theory to suggest how actin–myosin electrostatic interactions might be of significance in the intermediate stages of binding, ensuring an engaged power stroke of the myosin motor that transmits force to the actin filament, and preventing the motor from getting stuck in a metastable pre‐power stroke state. We provide electrostatic force estimates that are in the pN range known to operate in the cycle.  相似文献   

14.
M Walker  H White  B Belknap    J Trinick 《Biophysical journal》1994,66(5):1563-1572
The structure of the complex of actin and myosin subfragment-1 (S1) during steady-state ATP hydrolysis has been examined by electron microscopy. This complex is normally dissociated by ATP in vitro but was stabilized here by low ionic strength. Optimal conditions for attachment were established by light-scattering experiments that showed that approximately 70% of S1 could be bound in the presence of ATP. Micrographs of the unstained complex in vitreous water suggest that S1 attaches to actin in a variety of configurations in ATP; this contrasts with the single attached configuration seen in the presence of ADP. The data are therefore compatible with the idea that a change in attached configuration of the myosin cross-bridge is the origin of muscle force. In control experiments where ATP was allowed to hydrolyze completely the binding of the S1 seemed cooperative.  相似文献   

15.
Structural rearrangements of the myosin upper-50 kD subdomain are thought to play a key role in coordinating actin binding with nucleotide hydrolysis during the myosin ATPase cycle. Such rearrangements could open and close the active site in opposition to the actin-binding cleft, helping explain the opposing affinities of myosin for actin and nucleotide. To directly examine conformational changes across the active site during the ATPase cycle we have genetically engineered a mutant of chicken smooth-muscle myosin, F344W motor domain essential light chain, which contains a single tryptophan (344W) located on a short loop between two alpha helixes that traverse the upper-50 kD subdomain in front of the active site. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer was examined between the 344W donor probe and 2'(3')-O-(N-methylanthraniloyl) (mant)-nucleotide acceptor probes in the active site of this construct. The observed fluorescence resonance energy transfer efficiencies were 6.4% in the presence of mant ADP and 23.8% in the presence of mant ATP, corresponding to distances of 33.4 A and 24.9 A, respectively. Our results are consistent with structural rearrangements in which there is an 8.5-A closure between the 344W residue and the mant moiety during the transition from the strongly (ADP) to weakly (ATP) actin-bound states of the myosin ATPase cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Molecular modeling of the myosin-S1(A1) isoform   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Type II myosin is the molecular motor which drives contraction upon cyclic interaction with filamentous actin while consuming ATP. The contemporary crystallographic structure of the myosin subfragment-1 (S1) of myosin covers both the motor domain of the heavy chain (MHC) as well as the essential (ELC) and regulatory light chains (RLC). A part of the N-terminus of the ELC is, however, missing in the 3D-models of Type II myosin. The N-terminal domain of the ELC comprises interesting functional features since it binds to actin thus controlling myosin motor activity. For the first time, we modeled the missing 46 N-terminal amino acid of the ELC to the contemporary actin-myosin-S1 complex. We show a rod-like 91 A structure being long enough to bridge the gap between the ELC core of myosin-S1 and the appropriate binding site of the ELC on the actin filament.  相似文献   

17.
At an intermediate stage in the hydrolysis of magnesium adenosine 5'-phosphate (MgATP) by myosin or actomyosin, there is an exchange of oxygen between water and the P gamma group of enzyme-bound nucleotide. Starting with [P gamma-18O]ATP as substrate, the exchange is revealed in the [18O]Pi species that are ultimately released as product into the reaction medium. An analysis of the distribution of these labeled Pi species, which contain 3, 2, 1, or none of the 18O atoms originally on the P gamma of ATP, is used to probe intermediate stages of the hydrolytic mechanism. In recent years, studies of this kind by several groups have shown that more than one pathway of hydrolysis operates. The work reported here demonstrates that two of these pathways are spurious; one is a "nonexchanging MgATPase" that is present in fresh myosin preparations; the other is an induced slow exchange that develops in myosin during storage (-20 degrees C) and subsequent aging (4 degrees C). However, after correction for these artifacts, two normal pathways for actomyosin hydrolysis remain. These normal pathways differ in the mode of interaction between actin and myosin in the course of hydrolysis; one is the Lymn-Taylor pathway where oxygen exchange occurs at a stage when actin and myosin are dissociated; the other is a pathway in which actin and myosin are associated during oxygen exchange. Each of these two pathways contributes an equal amount of Pi to the product pool. Thus, on average, each myosin head uses each of these pathways half the time. The findings suggest, e.g., that during contraction, myosin can dissociate from the actin filament only during every other cycle of MgATP hydrolysis or that only half the heads, at any one time, can exchange oxygen while free of the actin filament.  相似文献   

18.
To identify regulatory mechanisms potentially involved in formation of actomyosin structures in smooth muscle cells, the influence of F-actin on smooth muscle myosin assembly was examined. In physiologically relevant buffers, AMPPNP binding to myosin caused transition to the soluble 10S myosin conformation due to trapping of nucleotide at the active sites. The resulting 10S myosin-AMPPNP complex was highly stable and thick filament assembly was suppressed. However, upon addition to F-actin, myosin readily assembled to form thick filaments. Furthermore, myosin assembly caused rearrangement of actin filament networks into actomyosin fibers composed of coaligned F-actin and myosin thick filaments. Severin-induced fragmentation of actin in actomyosin fibers resulted in immediate disassembly of myosin thick filaments, demonstrating that actin filaments were indispensable for mediating myosin assembly in the presence of AMPPNP. Actomyosin fibers also formed after addition of F-actin to nonphosphorylated 10S myosin monomers containing the products of ATP hydrolysis trapped at the active site. The resulting fibers were rapidly disassembled after addition of millimolar MgATP and consequent transition of myosin to the soluble 10S state. However, reassembly of myosin filaments in the presence of MgATP and F-actin could be induced by phosphorylation of myosin P-light chains, causing regeneration of actomyosin fiber bundles. The results indicate that actomyosin fibers can be spontaneously formed by F-actin-mediated assembly of smooth muscle myosin. Moreover, induction of actomyosin fibers by myosin light chain phosphorylation in the presence of actin filament networks provides a plausible hypothesis for contractile fiber assembly in situ.  相似文献   

19.
Various aspects of actin--myosin interaction were studied with actin preparations from two types of smooth muscle: bovine aorta and chicken gizzard, and from two types of sarcomeric muscle: bovine cardiac and rabbit skeletal. All four preparations activated the Mg2+-ATPase activity of skeletal muscle myosin to the same Vmax, but the Kapp for the smooth muscle preparations was higher. At low KCl, pH 8.0 and millimolar substrate concentrations the Kapp values differed by a factor of 2.5. This differential behaviour of the four actin preparations correlates with amino acid substitutions at positions 17 and 89 of actin polypeptide chain, differentiating the smooth-muscle-specific gamma and alpha isomers from cardiac and skeletal-muscle-specific alpha isomers. This correlation provides evidence for involvement of the NH2-terminal portion of the actin polypeptide chain in the interaction with myosin. The differences in the activation of myosin ATPase by various actins were sensitive to changes in the substrate and KCl concentration and pH of the assay medium. Addition of myosin subfragment-1 or heavy meromyosin in the absence of nucleotide produced similar changes in the fluorescence of a fluorescent reagent N-(1-pyrenyl)-iodoacetamide, attached at Cys-374, or 1,N6-ethenoadenosine 5'-diphosphate substituted for the bound ADP in actin protomers in gizzard and skeletal muscle F-actin. The results are consistent with an influence of the amino acid substitutions on ionic interactions leading to complex formation between actin and myosin intermediates in the ATPase cycle but not on the associated states.  相似文献   

20.
To understand the nature of the ATP-induced structural change in myosin subfragment-1, rabbit and chicken skeletal subfragments-1s were cleaved by various proteolytic enzymes in the absence, and in the presence, of ATP and the exact locations of the cleavage sites that were affected by ATP were determined from the amino end analysis of fragments by the use of a protein sequencer. It was found that subtilisin cleaved a site between Gln27 and Asn28 of rabbit subfragment-1 and between Gln28 and Asn29 of chicken subfragment-1 only in the presence of ATP. Thermolysin cleaved a site between Pro31 and Phe32 of chicken subfragment-1 in the presence of ATP, but the same site of rabbit subfragment-1 was not cleaved. The location of these sites is quite similar to the ATP-induced chymotryptic cleavage site of chicken gizzard heavy meromyosin, between Trp29 and Ser30 as reported by others. It is suggested, therefore, that the structure and the ATP-induced structural change in the regions are similar in these subfragment-1s. ATP also changes the cleavage rate of the 26K-50K junction by many proteases. Exact cleavage sites were determined and the relationship between their location and the suppression or the enhancement by ATP of the cleavage was studied. It was found that the cleavage sites were restricted to a quite narrow region and only the cleavage by thermolysin that attacked the middle of the region was enhanced by ATP. The distribution of the cleavage sites and the effect of ATP suggest that ATP induces drastic structural change at the middle of the 26K-50K junction region. The region attacked easily by many proteases coincided very well with a hydrophilic region indicated by the hydropathy index. The region probably protrudes outside and is, therefore, easily attacked by many proteases.  相似文献   

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